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Examination of Cardiac Apex Beat  E-mail
(17 votes)

Apex beat is the palpable cardiac impulse. It is also defined as the lowermost and outermost (most lateral and most inferior) prominent cardiac pulsation. Examination of this cardiac impulse can give valuable inputs into the diagnosis of cardiac disease.

Normal location:

It is normally located in the left fifth intercostal space, about 1 centimeter medial to the mid-clavicular line.

In children less than 7 years of age, the apex beat is located in the 4th intercostal space, lateral to the mid-clavicular line.

Method of examination:

Position the flat of your hand so that the middle finger lies on the left 5th intercostal space of the patient, covering the anterolateral ribcage. Other finders are positioned on the spaces above and below. If no pulsation is felt, move the hand in other directions, feeling for a pulsation.

Once the apex is felt, ascertain whether it is the most prominent pulsation. Then to identify the position, palpate the sternal angle (angle of Louis). It is the angle between the manubrium and the body of the sternum. The second rib corresponds to this angle. below the second rib is the corresponding intercostal space. Staring from that space, count the intercostal spaces and reach the palpable apex and identify the space in which it is located. Follow this by measuring the distance between the pulsation and the mid-clavicular line. If the pulsation is nearer to any other vertical landmark line, like the anterior or middle axillary lines, it is better to state the position in relation to those lines rather than mid-clavicular line. For example, instead of mentioning that the apex is 6 cm lateral to mid-clavicular line, it is better to document as 1 cm medial to middle axillary line.

Points to note in apex:

  1. Presence
  2. Location
  3. Size (is it localized or diffuse?)
  4. Amplitude (is it forceful?)
  5. Duration (is it abnormally sustained?)
  6. Type (assess based on above parameters, details are given below)
  7. Thrill

Causes for absence of apex beat:

Absent apex may be due to physiological and pathological causes.

Mnemonic: DR POPE 

Physiological causes:

  1. Dextrocardia. Though it will be absent at the 'usual' location on the left side, it will be present on the right side.
  2. Apex behind a Rib. In this case it may not be palpable in an intercostal space. Just turning the patient to the left lateral position will reveal the apex beat, confirming this cause.
Pathological causes:
  1. Pericardial effusion
  2. Obesity and thick chest wall
  3. Pleural effusion (left sided)
  4. Emphysema

Causes for displaced apex beat:

This has to be assessed along with tracheal position. If trachea is also shifted along with the displacement of apex beat, then it is due to mediastinal shift as a result of lung fibrosis, collapse, pneumothorax etc.

If the trachea is central but the apex is displaced, the causes may be:

  1. Left ventricular enlargement - the apex will be displaced downwards and laterally.
  2. Right ventricular enlargement - the apex will displaced laterally.
  3. Cardiomegaly due to significant enlargement of other chambers can also cause displacement
  4. Pectus excavatum
  5. Situs inversus/ dextrocardia

Abnormal types (characters) of apex beat:

The normal apex beat is localized pulsation in the normal location as described above. Here are some abnormal characters (please refer to the picture too):

  1. Tapping Apex - This is an almost normal apex beat with a palpable first heart sound. This is due to a loud first heart sound heard in mitral stenosis.
  2. Hyperdynamic Apex - This is classically seen in volume overload conditions where there is ventricular dilatation (aortic regurgitation, hyperdynamic circulation etc). This is a forceful but ill-sustained apex that is palpable over a larger area than normal (diffuse).
  3. Heaving Apex - Classically seen in pressure overload conditions that result in ventricular hypertrophy (aortic stenosis, systemic hypertension etc). This is a forceful and sustained apex that is usually localized.
  4. Double Impulse Apex - Two impulses felt during systole rather than the normal single upstroke. This is seen on HCM - hypertrophic cardiomyopathy).
  5. Dyskinetic Apex - An apex that is uncoordinated, seen in myocardial infarction when there are dyskinetic movements of the infarcted myocardium.
Analysis of apex beat character
Schematic representation of apex beat character analysis

Some apex related terminology clarified:

Localized apex: Palpable in a single intercostal space and the longest diameter of the pulsation is within 2.5 cm. This is normal.

Diffuse apex: Apex palpable in more than one intercostal space or longest diameter more than 2.5 cm, even within a single space.
 

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feed10 Comments
sid
September 05, 2007
202.188.20.180

Thank you very very much for this. For the first time now, I have 'understood' the types of apex beat and now I can also rattle 6 causes for absent apex! Hope to see more here...

misspaul
September 15, 2007
202.188.20.180

Same here... I liked the article here. For teh first time I understood the apex beat classification.

Joel G Mathew
September 18, 2007
59.93.24.189

That post was just great. I really wanted that mnemonic. Thanks a lot!

Augusta Josse
September 28, 2007
202.188.20.180

Can I ask u how u made the image with classification? I am sure it is original as it is not there anywhere else. I just wanna know how you made it, that is which program u used. Thanks in advance!

Shashikiran.
October 08, 2007
202.188.20.180

Thanks for your comments. Glad to be of help.
Regarding the image, I just made it in PowerPoint using boxes from the autoshapes, and then saving that slide as a 'png' image file. I had to reduce the size a bit as it was too big, but once I did that, it was ready for this article.

clem
December 12, 2007
196.207.35.48

hi thank u for overview. so many clinical med texts differ between hyperkinetic and hyperdynamic etc. my question is can u by palpating the apex, eliciting a hyperdynamic, volume overloaded ventricle, by inference, say the patient has a cardiomyopathy?
thank u

Harpent
December 17, 2007
59.94.178.212

well I have liked that post and I think it is great. for a newbie like me.

Harpent
December 17, 2007
59.94.179.28

That post was just great. I really wanted that mnemonic. Thanks a lot!

Dennis
February 21, 2008
202.188.20.180

This is the best info I have seen on cardiac apex. I like especially the flow chart that you have created above. Absolutely clear, except that I was not sure how a S1 would be like to 'palpate'..

prakash
March 27, 2008
122.167.62.174

it is good


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