11yr ripened boy next to a strong, loud heartbeat, and a swooshing nouns?

what does this mean?
Answers:    does the wooshing nouns get stronger with breathing in? or out? where on earth do you hear it? where is your stet on the body? is the sound continuous? or goes up and down next to begin and end of heart beat? surrounded by general wooshing sound comes from valves that are not closing completely or channel inadequately.
Heart murmur suspected. Murmurs are blowing, whooshing, or rasping sounds produced by turbulent blood flow through the heart valves or near the heart.
* Chest x-ray
* ECG
* Echocardiography
Please call on Merck's web page given below and click for hearing various heart murmurs.
ref="http://www.nlm.nih.gov/medlineplus/ency/article/003266.htm" rel="nofollow">http://www.nlm.nih.gov/medlineplus/ency/…
http://www.merck.com/mmpe/sec07/ch069/ch…
I'm going to have to assume that you mean when auscultated near a stethoscope in this instance.

Heart tones are a complex and often difficult to learn nouns of study. It's truly impossibly to tell what is going on from that description, but I'll give you the likely culprit that comes to mind.
al-Septal Defect - In utero the blood circulation though the heart is roughly backwards. In lay down to facilitate this the pre-natal heart has what is known as the foramen ovale, which is a rather huge hole between the two upper chambers of the heart [atria]. Shortly [within about a minute] after childbirth the newlyborn infant's circulation changes to what it will be for the rest of their existence and the foramen ovale closes. Sometimes this does not occur and a person will have a official document foramen ovale, which may also be known as an atrial-septal defect.

The whooshing sound you hear is blood flowing between the atria, to some extent than through the correct path of the human 4 chambered heart.

There's my best guess. Enjoy! Source(s): Paramedic
sounds like it is not beating within rhythm


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