Lub-dub Sounds May 2026

A slightly lower-pitched, longer "lub."

Think of your heart as a house with four rooms (chambers) and four doors (valves). To get blood moving in the right direction, those doors must open to let blood through and then slam shut to prevent it from leaking backward. The "lub" and "dub" are the sonic booms of those doors closing. The first sound, "Lub" (clinically known as S1 ), marks the beginning of systole —the moment your heart squeezes blood out to the body. lub-dub sounds

Let’s pull back the curtain on the human body’s most important soundtrack. In simple terms, the "lub-dub" is the sound of your heart valves snapping shut. A slightly lower-pitched, longer "lub

Thump-thump. Thump-thump.

It’s the most famous two-syllable sound on Earth. From the first time a doctor presses a stethoscope to a newborn’s chest, we are taught to listen for the “lub-dub.” But have you ever stopped to wonder what actually creates that iconic sound? Is it the heart beating? The blood moving? Or something else entirely? The first sound, "Lub" (clinically known as S1

"The squeeze is starting. No blood is allowed back into the top rooms." Breaking Down the "Dub" (S2) The second sound, "Dub" (clinically known as S2 ), marks the end of systole and the beginning of rest (diastole).

That longer rest is crucial. It’s the moment when the heart fills up with blood again, preparing for the next "lub." Sometimes, a doctor doesn't hear a clean "lub-dub." Instead, they hear a "lub- shhh -dub" or a "lub-dub- whoosh ." This is called a heart murmur .

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