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Heart Murmurs in Children

Parents fear the worst when their child is diagnosed with a heart murmur; however, the diagnosis is extremely common in children.  In fact, many children are diagnosed with a heart murmur at some point during their lives.  Most murmurs are not a cause for concern and have no effect on a child's health at all.

"It's not unusual for a murmur to be noticed during a checkup, even though none was heard before," says Alberto Mendoza Paredes, MD, pediatric cardiologist at Driscoll Children's Hospital.  "Innocent murmurs tend to come and go, depending on a child's heart rate, position during the exam and the presence of fever.  Some new murmurs might be a sign of a newly developed heart problem.  And some heart problems present from birth (congenital heart problems) at first might not be severe enough to cause a murmur that can be detected during an exam."

What causes a heart murmur?

Heart murmurs may be heard in a normal healthy heart of a child, or they may be caused by a number of factors or diseases, including:

  • Defective heart valves

  • Holes in the walls inside the heart (atrial septal defect or ventricular septal defect)

  • Other structural heart defects (congenital or present at birth) 

  • Fever

  • Anemia (low blood counts)

What are the different types of murmurs?

Your child's health care provider will evaluate a murmur based on several factors. Murmurs are analyzed for pitch, loudness, location and duration. They also are graded according to their intensity (on a scale of one to six, with one being very faint and six being very loud).

Types of murmurs include the following:

  • Systolic murmur. A heart murmur that occurs during a heart muscle contraction or when blood is pushed out to the body

  • Diastolic murmur. A heart murmur that occurs during heart muscle relaxation between beats or when heart chambers are re-filling before the next contraction

  • Continuous murmur. A heart murmur that occurs throughout the cardiac cycle, during contraction and relaxation

Heart murmurs can change and be heard or not heard at different times. Some large heart defects have almost no murmur in the newborn due to unequal pressures on both sides of the heart. Murmurs may be inconsistent and difficult to hear in an infant who is agitated or crying. Thus, sometimes murmurs may be missed or not detected. For these reasons, your doctor will listen and evaluate your child's heart sounds multiple times throughout your child's growth and development.  

Do all murmurs signify heart disease?

Not all heart murmurs mean heart disease. Sometimes, a murmur may be heard in a normal child as the strong, healthy heart pumps blood into the vessels. This is known as an "innocent murmur." It usually resolves as the child grows. 

Murmurs can also be heard in a child with no heart disease but who has a fever or who is anemic; these murmurs often go away when the underlying problem is treated.

What tests may be used to evaluate a heart murmur?

  • Chest X-ray. This helps evaluate the size of the heart. 

  • Echocardiography (echo). An ultrasound procedure that evaluates the structure and function of the heart. An ultrasound generates pictures using sound waves.

  • Electrocardiogram (ECG). A simple test using stickers placed on the chest that can detect and record the electrical activity of the heart.      

What is the treatment for a heart murmur?

Many heart murmurs are normal, extra sounds in children with strong, healthy hearts. These children require no treatment. Some of these heart murmurs may resolve over time. "Even if a hole or structural defect is found in the heart, it may close as your child grows," says Dr. Mendoza Paredes. However, some defects will require surgery to correct. Others are caused by conditions not related to the heart, such as anemia. In these cases, the heart murmur will lessen or resolve as the underlying condition is treated.  

 

© 2000-2024 The StayWell Company, LLC. All rights reserved. This information is not intended as a substitute for professional medical care. Always follow your healthcare professional's instructions.