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Home » Water Hammer Pulse (Corrigan Pulse): Causes, Features, and Clinical Insight

Water Hammer Pulse (Corrigan Pulse): Causes, Features, and Clinical Insight

September 12, 2025 by Marksparks .arkansas Leave a Comment

Water Hammer Pulse (Corrigan Pulse): Causes, Features, and Clinical Insight

Question. Describe Briefly the Water Hammer Pulse.

Answer. It is also called as Corrigan pulse.

  • A water hammer pulse is a large bounding pulse with an increased stroke volume of the left ventricle and a decrease in the peripheral resistance, leading to wide pulse pressure.
  • The pulse strikes the palpating finger with a rapid, forceful jerk and quickly disappears.
  • It is best felt in the radial artery with the patient’s arm elevated.
  • It is described as having a water hammer quality because of its sudden impact and collapsing quality because it falls away so rapidly.
  • The collapsing pulse is caused by the artery suddenly emptying as some of the blood flows from the aorta to the ventricle.

Water Hammer Pulse (Corrigan Pulse): Causes, Features, and Clinical Insight

Water Hammer Pulse Causes

1. Physiological

  • Fever
  • Chronic alcoholism
  • Pregnancy

2. High output states or syndrome

  • Anemia
  • Beri Beri
  • Cor pulmonale
  • Liver cirrhosis
  • Paget’s disease
  • Arteriovenous fistula
  • Thyrotoxicosis

Corrigan Pulse (Water Hammer Pulse) Symptoms and Diagnosis

3. Cardiac lesions

  • Aortic regurgitation
  • Rupture of the sinus of Valsalva into the heart chamber
  • Patent ductus arteriosus
  • Aortopulmonary window
  • Bradycardia
  • Systolic hypertension

ECG Waveform Diagram

Question 7. How Will You Differentiate Arterial And Venous Pulse?

Answer.

Differentiate Arterial And Venous Pulse

Filed Under: General Medicine

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