Lesson 5,
Topic 3
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Diagnosis
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The definitive diagnostic test for pulmonic stenosis is:
- Doppler echocardiography
- Cardiac catheterization
A presumptive diagnosis can be made with:
- Auscultation of a left basilar systolic heart murmur
- Normal femoral arterial pulse
- Right ventricular enlargement on ECG and
- Right ventricular enlargement on radiography
- Main pulmonary artery bulge on radiographs
- Radiology may show:
- right ventricular enlargement
- bulge in the main pulmonary artery
- ascites
- hepatomegaly
- ECG may show:
- normal ECG
- right ventricular enlargement criteria with moderate to severe pulmonic stenosis
- right atrial enlargement
- may be normal with mild cases
- dysrhythmias may be noted
- Echocardiography:
- right ventricular hypertrophy
- stenosis of the pulmonic valve
- increased velocity of flow across the pulmonic valvular orifice by Doppler
- Not only does this data provide a diagnosis but it remains the most critical data to address severity of the stenosis
- pulmonic regurgitation by Doppler
- right ventricular enlargement
- tricuspid regurgitation by Doppler