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Murmur

Murmur is a term used to describe a soft, indistinct sound produced by a disturbance in a medium, such as air or liquid. It can refer to a variety of everyday noises, including ambient background sounds, a whispered complaint, or a gentle natural sound like wind or a flowing stream.

In medicine, a heart murmur is an abnormal sound heard during auscultation with a stethoscope, resulting from

Outside medicine, murmurs can describe quiet natural sounds, such as a brook babbling over stones or wind

Etymology traces the word to Middle English and Latin roots related to murmuring sounds, reflecting its long

turbulent
blood
flow
within
the
heart
or
great
vessels.
Murmurs
are
described
by
their
timing
(systolic
or
diastolic),
quality,
and
loudness,
and
are
often
graded
on
a
scale
from
1
to
6.
Many
murmurs
in
children
or
healthy
adults
are
benign,
or
innocent,
but
others
reflect
underlying
heart
conditions
such
as
valvular
stenosis
or
regurgitation,
congenital
defects,
or
heart
failure.
Evaluation
typically
includes
physical
examination
and,
when
indicated,
echocardiography
to
visualize
heart
valves
and
flow
patterns.
rustling
through
trees.
The
term
also
appears
in
literature
and
everyday
language
as
a
verb
meaning
to
murmur
or
to
speak
in
a
low,
indistinct
voice,
or
as
a
noun
for
a
low,
continuous
whisper
or
protest.
association
with
soft,
unresolved
noise.