Levine scale
In cardiac physiology, the Levine grading scale is a numeric scoring system to characterize the intensity or the loudness of a heart murmur. The eponym is from researcher Samuel A. Levine who studied the significance of systolic heart murmurs. The grading gives a number to the intensity from 1 to 6: The palpable murmur is known as thrill, which can be felt on grade 4 or higher.
- The murmur is only audible on listening carefully for some time.
- The murmur is faint but immediately audible on placing the stethoscope on the chest.
- A loud murmur readily audible but with no thrill.
- A loud murmur with a thrill.
- A loud murmur with a thrill. The murmur is so loud that it is audible with only the rim of the stethoscope touching the chest.
- A loud murmur with a thrill. The murmur is audible with the stethoscope not touching the chest but lifted just off it.
The Levine scale is usually written down as a fraction of 6 and in Roman numerals, as in a scale of II/VI.