Austin Flint Murmur

Austin Flint Murmur


Austin Flint Murmur

Austin Flint Murmur

The Austin Flint murmur is a diastolic murmur associated with severe aortic regurgitation (AR). It is named after the American physician Austin Flint, who first described it in 1862.


🔹 Mechanism

  • In severe aortic regurgitation, blood flows backward from the aorta into the left ventricle (LV) during diastole.
  • The regurgitant jet strikes the anterior leaflet of the mitral valve, causing it to vibrate and partially restrict normal mitral inflow.
  • This creates a functional mitral stenosis–like murmur, even though the mitral valve is structurally normal.

🔹 Clinical Features

  • Type: Mid-to-late diastolic, low-pitched rumbling murmur.
  • Best heard at: The apex (similar location to mitral stenosis murmur).
  • No opening snap (distinguishes from mitral stenosis).
  • Associated findings of severe AR:
    • Wide pulse pressure
    • Bounding “water hammer” pulses (Corrigan’s pulse)
    • Head bobbing (de Musset’s sign)
    • Nailbed capillary pulsations (Quincke’s sign)

🔹 Differential Diagnosis

  • Mitral stenosis murmur
    • Has opening snap + presystolic accentuation (in sinus rhythm).
    • Caused by structural mitral valve disease.
  • Austin Flint murmur
    • No opening snap, no loud S1.
    • Caused by functional mitral valve obstruction due to regurgitant jet.

🔹 Clinical Importance

  • Presence of an Austin Flint murmur indicates severe aortic regurgitation and usually suggests the need for surgical evaluation (valve replacement/repair).

The Austin Flint murmur is 

a low-pitched, mid-to-late diastolic rumbling heart murmur heard at the apex (bottom) of the heart. It is associated with severe aortic regurgitation, where blood flows backward into the left ventricle, and is not caused by any abnormality of the mitral valve itself. 

Mechanism

While the exact mechanism is debated, the leading theory is that the murmur is caused by the regurgitant jet of blood from the aorta striking the inner wall of the left ventricle. This creates turbulence and vibrations that generate the rumbling sound. Some evidence suggests this jet also vibrates the anterior leaflet of the mitral valve, which can cause its premature closure during diastole. 

Symptoms and physical findings

The Austin Flint murmur itself is not a symptom, but it indicates a diagnosis of severe aortic regurgitation. The murmur’s characteristics may be heard during a physical examination, but additional signs of severe aortic regurgitation are usually present: 

  • Aortic insufficiency murmur: A separate, high-pitched, blowing diastolic murmur heard best at the left sternal border.
  • Widened pulse pressure: The difference between systolic and diastolic blood pressure is large due to the backflow of blood during diastole.
  • “Water hammer” pulse: A strong, brisk pulse that collapses suddenly during diastole. 

Austin Flint murmur vs. mitral stenosis

The Austin Flint murmur is clinically significant because its characteristics mimic those of mitral stenosis, a different heart valve condition. The following table shows how a doctor can differentiate between the two conditions. 

Feature Austin Flint MurmurMitral Stenosis Murmur
Primary ConditionSevere aortic regurgitation.Mitral valve narrowing.
Mitral ValveAnatomically normal.Abnormally narrow.
Opening SnapAbsent, since there is no structural mitral valve disease.Present, as the stiff mitral valve opens.
Loudness of S1Usually normal.A loud S1 heart sound.
Response to Amyl NitriteDecreases in intensity due to a drop in afterload.Increases in intensity and duration as heart rate rises.

Diagnosis and management

An audible Austin Flint murmur is a sign of advanced aortic regurgitation that requires further investigation. 

  • Diagnosis: The presence of the murmur is confirmed using a transthoracic Doppler echocardiogram, which visualizes the heart’s structure and blood flow.
  • Management: Treatment is focused on the underlying severe aortic regurgitation and may include regular monitoring or surgical valve replacement, depending on the severity and presence of other symptoms. 

Austin Flint Murmur

Q1. The Austin Flint murmur is heard in:
A. Severe aortic regurgitation
B. Mitral stenosis
C. Pulmonary hypertension
D. Tricuspid regurgitation
✅ It is a hallmark of severe aortic regurgitation.
Q2. The mechanism of the Austin Flint murmur is:
A. Calcified mitral valve leaflets
B. Vibration of mitral valve anterior leaflet by AR jet
C. Pulmonary venous turbulence
D. Ventricular septal defect jet
✅ It is due to the AR jet striking the mitral leaflet.
Q3. The Austin Flint murmur is best heard at:
A. Right 2nd intercostal space
B. Left sternal border
C. Apex
D. Pulmonic area
✅ It is a mid-to-late diastolic murmur best heard at the apex.
Q4. Which type of murmur is the Austin Flint murmur?
A. Pansystolic
B. Early diastolic
C. Continuous
D. Mid-to-late diastolic
✅ It is a rumbling mid-late diastolic murmur.
Q5. The Austin Flint murmur mimics:
A. Mitral stenosis
B. Atrial septal defect
C. Tricuspid stenosis
D. Mitral regurgitation
✅ It functionally mimics mitral stenosis.
Q6. Which of the following is absent in Austin Flint murmur but present in mitral stenosis?
A. Loud S1
B. Opening snap
C. Mid-diastolic rumble
D. Best heard at apex
✅ No opening snap is present in Austin Flint murmur.
Q7. The Austin Flint murmur indicates:
A. Mild AR
B. Moderate AR
C. Severe AR
D. Any grade of AR
✅ Its presence indicates severe AR.
Q8. The pitch of the Austin Flint murmur is usually:
A. High-pitched
B. Musical
C. Crescendo systolic
D. Low-pitched
✅ It is a low-pitched rumbling murmur.
Q9. The Austin Flint murmur is due to:
A. Functional mitral stenosis
B. True mitral stenosis
C. Mitral valve prolapse
D. Hypertrophic cardiomyopathy
✅ It is due to functional MS caused by AR jet.
Q10. A useful way to differentiate Austin Flint murmur from mitral stenosis is:
A. Murmur timing
B. Opening snap absent in Austin Flint
C. Best heard at apex
D. Low-pitched quality
✅ Key distinction = no opening snap in Austin Flint murmur.
Q11. Austin Flint murmur is usually associated with:
A. Narrow pulse pressure
B. Pulsus paradoxus
C. Wide pulse pressure
D. Pulsus alternans
✅ Severe AR causes wide pulse pressure.
Q12. Which other murmur is often heard in the same patient?
A. Mid-systolic click
B. Pansystolic MR murmur
C. Continuous PDA murmur
D. Early diastolic AR murmur
✅ Patients also have early diastolic AR murmur.
Q13. Which maneuver can accentuate the Austin Flint murmur?
A. Squatting
B. Valsalva strain
C. Standing
D. Inspiration
✅ Squatting increases afterload, worsening AR.
Q14. Austin Flint murmur is an example of a:
A. Innocent murmur
B. Functional murmur
C. Organic murmur
D. Physiological in children
✅ It is functional, not due to structural MS.
Q15. Which valve abnormality is directly responsible?
A. Mitral valve
B. Pulmonic valve
C. Aortic valve
D. Tricuspid valve
✅ It occurs due to severe AR from aortic valve.
Q16. Which of the following signs is NOT associated with AR/Austin Flint murmur?
A. Corrigan’s pulse
B. Quincke’s sign
C. De Musset’s sign
D. Opening snap
✅ Opening snap is seen in mitral stenosis, not AR.
Q17. Surgical valve replacement is supported by:
A. Severe AR with Austin Flint murmur
B. Mild AR with systolic murmur
C. Innocent flow murmur
D. Early systolic click
✅ Severe AR with Austin Flint murmur = surgical indication.
Q18. Which imaging confirms the mechanism?
A. Chest X-ray
B. Echocardiography
C. MRI brain
D. CT aorta
✅ Echo shows AR jet striking mitral leaflet.
Q19. Who first described the Austin Flint murmur?
A. William Osler
B. Paul Dudley White
C. Austin Flint
D. Thomas Laennec
✅ Described by Austin Flint in 1862.
Q20. The Austin Flint murmur is best described as:
A. Harsh systolic murmur
B. Musical continuous murmur
C. Pansystolic murmur
D. Mid-to-late diastolic rumbling murmur
✅ It is a classic mid-to-late diastolic rumbling murmur.

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