CVS Osce
CVS Osce
CVS Osce
Adequately expose the patient’s chest for the examination (offer a blanket to allow exposure only when required and if
appropriate, inform patients they do not need to remove their bra). Exposure of the patient’s lower legs is also helpful to
assess for peripheral oedema and signs of peripheral vascular disease.
Ask the patient if they have any pain before proceeding with the clinical examination.
General inspection
Clinical signs
Inspect the patient from the end of the bed whilst at rest, looking for clinical signs suggestive of underlying pathology:
Cyanosis: a bluish discolouration of the skin due to poor circulation (e.g. peripheral vasoconstriction secondary
to hypovolaemia) or inadequate oxygenation of the blood (e.g. right-to-left cardiac shunting).
Shortness of breath: may indicate underlying cardiovascular (e.g. congestive heart failure, pericarditis) or
respiratory disease (e.g. pneumonia, pulmonary embolism).
Pallor: a pale colour of the skin that can suggest underlying anaemia (e.g. haemorrhage, chronic disease) or
poor perfusion (e.g. congestive cardiac failure). It should be noted that a healthy individual may have a pale
complexion that mimics pallor, however, pathological causes should be ruled out.
Oedema: typically presents with swelling of the limbs (e.g. pedal oedema) or abdomen (i.e. ascites). There are
many causes of oedema, but in the context of a cardiovascular examination OSCE station, congestive heart
failure is the most likely culprit.
Look for objects or equipment on or around the patient that may provide useful insights into their medical history and
current clinical status:
Medical equipment: note any oxygen delivery devices, ECG leads, medications (e.g. glyceryl trinitrate spray),
catheters (note volume/colour of urine) and intravenous access.
Mobility aids: items such as wheelchairs and walking aids give an indication of the patient’s current mobility
status.
Pillows: patients with congestive heart failure typically suffer from orthopnoea, preventing them from being
able to lie flat. As a result, they often use multiple pillows to prop themselves up.
Vital signs: charts on which vital signs are recorded will give an indication of the patient’s current clinical status
and how their physiological parameters have changed over time.
Fluid balance: fluid balance charts will give an indication of the patient’s current fluid status which may be
relevant if a patient appears fluid overloaded or dehydrated.
Prescriptions: prescribing charts or personal prescriptions can provide useful information about the patient’s
recent medications.
General inspection
Hands
The hands can provide lots of clinically relevant information and therefore a focused, structured assessment is essential.
Inspection
General observations
Colour: pallor suggests poor peripheral perfusion (e.g. congestive heart failure) and cyanosis may indicate
underlying hypoxaemia.
Tar staining: caused by smoking, a significant risk factor for cardiovascular disease (e.g. coronary artery disease,
hypertension).
Xanthomata: raised yellow cholesterol-rich deposits that are often noted on the palm, tendons of the wrist and
elbow. Xanthomata are associated with hyperlipidaemia (typically familial hypercholesterolaemia), another
important risk factor for cardiovascular disease (e.g. coronary artery disease, hypertension).
Arachnodactyly (‘spider fingers’): fingers and toes are abnormally long and slender, in comparison to the palm
of the hand and arch of the foot. Arachnodactyly is a feature of Marfan’s syndrome, which is associated with
mitral/aortic valve prolapse and aortic dissection.
Finger clubbing
In a healthy individual, you should be able to observe a small diamond-shaped window (known as Schamroth’s
window)
There are several other signs in the hands that are associated with endocarditis including:
Splinter haemorrhages: a longitudinal, red-brown haemorrhage under a nail that looks like a wood splinter.
Causes include local trauma, infective endocarditis, sepsis, vasculitis and psoriatic nail disease.
Janeway lesions: non-tender, haemorrhagic lesions that occur on the thenar and hypothenar eminences of the
palms (and soles). Janeway lesions are typically associated with infective endocarditis.
Osler’s nodes: red-purple, slightly raised, tender lumps, often with a pale centre, typically found on the fingers
or toes. They are typically associated with infective endocarditis.
Palpation
Temperature
Place the dorsal aspect of your hand onto the patient’s to assess temperature:
In healthy individuals, the hands should be symmetrically warm, suggesting adequate perfusion.
Cool hands may suggest poor peripheral perfusion (e.g. congestive cardiac failure, acute coronary syndrome).
Apply five seconds of pressure to the distal phalanx of one of a patient’s fingers and then release.
In healthy individuals, the initial pallor of the area you compressed should return to its normal colour in less
than two seconds.
A CRT that is greater than two seconds suggests poor peripheral perfusion (e.g. hypovolaemia, congestive
heart failure) and the need to assess central capillary refill time.
Peripheral cyanosis 3
Xanthomata 5
Arachnodactyly
Finger clubbing 6
Splinter haemorrhages
Janeway lesions 7
Osler's nodes 8
Palpate the patient’s radial pulse, located at the radial side of the wrist, with the tips of your index and middle
fingers aligned longitudinally over the course of the artery.
Heart rate
Assessing heart rate:
You can calculate the heart rate in a number of ways, including measuring for 60 seconds, measuring for 30
seconds and multiplying by 2 or measuring for 15 seconds and multiplying by 4.
For irregular rhythms, you should measure the pulse for a full 60 seconds to improve accuracy.
A pulse <60 bpm is known as bradycardia and has a wide range of aetiologies (e.g. healthy athletic individuals,
atrioventricular block, medications, sick sinus syndrome).
A pulse of >100 bpm is known as tachycardia and also has a wide range of aetiologies (e.g. anxiety,
supraventricular tachycardia, hypovolaemia, hyperthyroidism).
An irregular rhythm is most commonly caused by atrial fibrillation, but other causes include ectopic beats in
healthy individuals and atrioventricular blocks.
Radio-radial delay
Radio-radial delay describes a loss of synchronicity between the radial pulse on each arm, resulting in the pulses
occurring at different times.
If the radial pulses are out of sync, this would be described as radio-radial delay.
Aortic dissection
Aortic coarctation
Collapsing pulse
A collapsing pulse is a forceful pulse that rapidly increases and subsequently collapses. It is also sometimes referred to
as a ‘water hammer pulse’.
1. Ask the patient if they have any pain in their right shoulder, as you will need to move it briskly as part of the
assessment for a collapsing pulse (if they do, this assessment should be avoided).
2. Palpate the radial pulse with your right hand wrapped around the patient’s wrist.
3. Palpate the brachial pulse (medial to the biceps brachii tendon) with your left hand, whilst also supporting the
patient’s elbow.
5. Palpate for a collapsing pulse: As blood rapidly empties from the arm in diastole, you should be able to feel
a tapping impulse through the muscle bulk of the arm. This is caused by the sudden retraction of the column of
blood within the arm during diastole.
Brachial pulse
2. Position the patient so that their upper arm is abducted, their elbow is partially flexed and their forearm is externally
rotated.
3. With your right hand, palpate medial to the biceps brachii tendon and lateral to the medial epicondyle of the
humerus. Deeper palpation is required (compared to radial pulse palpation) due to the location of the brachial artery.
Normal
Blood pressure
Measure the patient’s blood pressure in both arms (see our blood pressure guide for more details).
A comprehensive blood pressure assessment should also include lying and standing blood pressure.
In a cardiovascular examination OSCE station, you are unlikely to have to carry out a thorough blood pressure
assessment due to time restraints, however, you should demonstrate that you have an awareness of what this would
involve.
Hypertension: blood pressure of greater than or equal to 140/90 mmHg if under 80 years old or greater than or
equal to 150/90 mmHg if you’re over 80 years old.
Wide pulse pressure: more than 100 mmHg of difference between systolic and diastolic blood pressure. Causes
include aortic regurgitation and aortic dissection.
Difference between arms: more than 20 mmHg difference in blood pressure between each arm is abnormal
and may suggest aortic dissection.
Carotid pulse
Prior to palpating the carotid artery, you need to auscultate the vessel to rule out the presence of a bruit. The presence
of a bruit suggests underlying carotid stenosis, making palpation of the vessel potentially dangerous due to the risk of
dislodging a carotid plaque and causing an ischaemic stroke.
Place the diaphragm of your stethoscope between the larynx and the anterior border of the
sternocleidomastoid muscle over the carotid pulse and ask the patient to take a deep breath and then hold it whilst you
listen.
Be aware that at this point in the examination, the presence of a ‘carotid bruit’ may, in fact, be a radiating cardiac
murmur (e.g. aortic stenosis).
1. Ensure the patient is positioned safely on the bed, as there is a risk of inducing reflex bradycardia when palpating the
carotid artery (potentially causing a syncopal episode).
2. Gently place your fingers between the larynx and the anterior border of the sternocleidomastoid muscle to locate
the carotid pulse.
Jugular venous pressure (JVP) provides an indirect measure of central venous pressure. This is possible because the
internal jugular vein (IJV) connects to the right atrium without any intervening valves, resulting in a continuous column of
blood. The presence of this continuous column of blood means that changes in right atrial pressure are reflected in the
IJV (e.g. raised right atrial pressure results in distension of the IJV).
The IJV runs between the medial end of the clavicle and the ear lobe, under the medial aspect of the
sternocleidomastoid, making it difficult to visualise (its double waveform pulsation is, however, sometimes visible due to
transmission through the sternocleidomastoid muscle).
Because of the inability to easily visualise the IJV, it’s tempting to use the external jugular vein (EJV) as a proxy for
assessment of central venous pressure during clinical assessment. However, because the EJV typically branches at a right
angle from the subclavian vein (unlike the IJV which sits in a straight line above the right atrium) it is a less
reliable indicator of central venous pressure.
3. Inspect for evidence of the IJV, running between the medial end of the clavicle and the ear lobe, under the medial
aspect of the sternocleidomastoid (it may be visible between just above the clavicle between the sternal and clavicular
heads of the sternocleidomastoid. The IJV has a double waveform pulsation, which helps to differentiate it from the
pulsation of the external carotid artery.
4. Measure the JVP by assessing the vertical distance between the sternal angle and the top of the pulsation point of
the IJV (in healthy individuals, this should be no greater than 3 cm).
A raised JVP indicates the presence of venous hypertension. Cardiac causes of a raised JVP include:
Right-sided heart failure: commonly caused by left-sided heart failure. Pulmonary hypertension is another
cause of right-sided heart failure, often occurring due to chronic obstructive pulmonary disease or interstitial
lung disease.
Constrictive pericarditis: often idiopathic, but rheumatoid arthritis and tuberculosis are also possible
underlying causes.
The hepatojugular reflux test involves the application of pressure to the liver whilst observing for a sustained rise in
JVP.
To be able to perform the test, there should be at least a 3cm distance from the upper margin of the baseline JVP to
the angle of the mandible:
In healthy individuals, this rise should last no longer than 1-2 cardiac cycles (it should then fall).
If the rise in JVP is sustained and equal to or greater than 4cm this is deemed a positive result.
This assessment can be uncomfortable for the patient and therefore it should only be performed when felt
necessary (an examiner will often prevent you from performing it in an OSCE but you should mention it).
Constrictive pericarditis
Restrictive cardiomyopathy
Face
Eyes
Conjunctival pallor: suggestive of underlying anaemia. Ask the patient to gently pull down their lower eyelid to
allow you to inspect the conjunctiva.
Corneal arcus: a hazy white, grey or blue opaque ring located in the peripheral cornea, typically occurring in
patients over the age of 60. In older patients, the condition is considered benign, however, its presence in
patients under the age of 50 suggests underlying hypercholesterolaemia.
Xanthelasma: yellow, raised cholesterol-rich deposits around the eyes associated with hypercholesterolaemia.
Kayser-Fleischer rings: dark rings that encircle the iris associated with Wilson’s disease. The disease involves
abnormal copper processing by the liver, resulting in accumulation and deposition in various tissues (including
the heart where it can cause cardiomyopathy).
Mouth
Central cyanosis: bluish discolouration of the lips and/or the tongue associated with hypoxaemia (e.g. a right to
left cardiac shunt)
Angular stomatitis: a common inflammatory condition affecting the corners of the mouth. It has a wide range
of causes including iron deficiency.
High arched palate: a feature of Marfan syndrome which is associated with mitral/aortic valve prolapse and
aortic dissection.
Conjunctival pallor
Corneal arcus
Xanthelasma 9
Kayser-Fleischer ring 10
Central cyanosis 11
Angular stomatitis 12
Look for clinical signs that may provide clues as to the patient’s past medical/surgical history:
Scars suggestive of previous thoracic surgery: see the thoracic scars section below.
Visible pulsations: a forceful apex beat may be visible secondary to underlying ventricular hypertrophy.
Thoracic scars
Median sternotomy scar: located in the midline of the thorax. This surgical approach is used for cardiac valve
replacement and coronary artery bypass grafts (CABG).
Anterolateral thoracotomy scar: located between the lateral border of the sternum and the mid-axillary line at
the 4th or 5th intercostal space. This surgical approach is used for minimally invasive cardiac valve surgery.
Infraclavicular scar: located in the infraclavicular region (on either side). This surgical approach is used
for pacemaker insertion.
Left mid-axillary scar: this surgical approach is used for the insertion of a subcutaneous implantable
cardioverter-defibrillator (ICD).
Palpation
Apex beat
Displacement of the apex beat from its usual location can occur due to ventricular hypertrophy.
Heaves
Place the heel of your hand parallel to the left sternal edge (fingers vertical) to palpate for heaves.
If heaves are present you should feel the heel of your hand being lifted with each systole.
Thrills
A thrill is a palpable vibration caused by turbulent blood flow through a heart valve (a thrill is a palpable
murmur).
You should assess for a thrill across each of the heart valves in turn (see valve locations below).
To do this place your hand horizontally across the chest wall, with the flats of your fingers and palm over
the valve to be assessed.
Valve locations
Tricuspid valve: 4th or 5th intercostal space at the lower left sternal edge.
Auscultation
A systematic routine will ensure you remember all the steps whilst giving you several chances to listen to each valve
area. Your routine should avoid excess repetition whilst each step should ‘build’ upon the information gathered by the
previous steps. Ask the patient to lift their breast to allow auscultation of the appropriate area if relevant.
2. Auscultate ‘upwards’ through the valve areas using the diaphragm of the stethoscope whilst continuing to palpate the
carotid pulse:
Tricuspid valve: 4th or 5th intercostal space at the lower left sternal edge.
3. Repeat auscultation across the four valves with the bell of the stethoscope.
Accentuation manoeuvres
4. Auscultate the carotid arteries using the diaphragm of the stethoscope whilst the patient holds their breath to listen
for radiation of an ejection systolic murmur caused by aortic stenosis.
5. Sit the patient forwards and auscultate over the aortic area with the diaphragm of the stethoscope
during expiration to listen for an early diastolic murmur caused by aortic regurgitation.
6. Roll the patient onto their left side and listen over the mitral area with the diaphragm of the stethoscope during
expiration to listen for a pansystolic murmur caused by mitral regurgitation. Continue to auscultate into the axilla to
identify radiation of this murmur.
7. With the patient still on their left side, listen again over the mitral area using the bell of the stethoscope during
expiration for a mid-diastolic murmur caused by mitral stenosis.
Bell vs diaphragm
The bell of the stethoscope is more effective at detecting low-frequency sounds, including the mid-diastolic murmur of
mitral stenosis.
The diaphragm of the stethoscope is more effective at detecting high-frequency sounds, including the ejection systolic
murmur of aortic stenosis, the early diastolic murmur of aortic regurgitation and the pansystolic murmur of mitral
regurgitation.
Repeat auscultation of the four heart valves using the bell of the stethoscope
Sit the patient forwards and auscultate over the aortic area with the diaphragm of the stethoscope during expiration
Auscultate the axilla listening for radiation of a mitral murmur
Final steps
Inspection
Auscultation
Auscultate the lung fields posteriorly:
Sacral oedema
Legs
Inspect and palpate the patient’s ankles for evidence of pitting pedal oedema (associated with right ventricular failure).
Inspect the patient’s legs for evidence of saphenous vein harvesting (performed as part of a coronary artery bypass
graft).