Corrigan’s Pulse and Quincke’s Pulse- ...While the patient was sitting upright, the right carotid artery was visibly pulsatile, with systolic swelling and rapid diastolic collapse — a sign known as Corrigan’s pulse (Panel A, arrow, and Video 1) (see source for video). The tips of the patient’s index finger and thumb as well as the nail bed of the thumb exhibited capillary pulsation — a sign known as Quincke’s pulse (Panel B, arrow, and Video 2) (see source for video). Corrigan’s pulse and Quincke’s pulse are two findings of chronic severe aortic regurgitation and are manifestations of a wide pulse pressure with large systolic stroke volume and rapid fall in arterial pressure. Echocardiography revealed a left ventricular ejection fraction of 56%, an end-systolic diameter of 46 mm (an increase from 36 mm measured in the previous year), and severe regurgitation of the prosthetic aortic valve. Because of progressive left ventricular dilatation and exertional dyspnea, the patient underwent valve-in-valve transcatheter aortic-valve replacement... 
#clinical #photo #NEJM #corrigans #pulse #quinckes #physicalexam
John Kevin Dayao @kevind · 6 years ago
MS3, UC San Diego School of Medicine Interested in pediatrics and community-based medicine. https://www.linkedin.com/in/jdayao/
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