The clinical, ECG and CXR findings in acute and chronic AR are shown in Table 1:
Clinical, ECG and CXR findings of aortic regurgitation | ||
Feature | Chronic AR | Acute AR |
Pulse | Rapid rise and quick collapse (water hammer pulse), double impulse, wide pulse pressure
| Tachycardia rapid rate of rise of arterial pulse |
Cardiac impulse | Hyperdynamic, maybe visible | Normal or hyperkinetic |
Auscultation | Soft blowing diastolic murmur LSE. Best heard with the patient sitting forward in fully held expiration Duration of the murmur in diastole correlates with severity of AR
| Early blowing diastolic murmur |
ECG | In moderate/severe disease LVH with or without strain pattern | Non specific ST T changes and sinus tachycardia or may be normal or show changes consistent with the underlying cause |
CXR | Cardiomegaly with LV prominence and possibly dilated aorta | Normal heart size and pulmonary oedema |