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Killip Classification for AMI

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When auscultating for the S3 gallop that distinguishes Killip Class I from Class II, position the patient in the left lateral decubitus position, use the bell of the stethoscope lightly applied to the cardiac apex, and listen during early diastole immediately after the S2. The S3 is a low-pitched sound best heard at the end of expiration. In noisy emergency departments, pressing the bell firmly (which converts it to a diaphragm) eliminates the S3 — this common error leads to underclassification.

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When Thomas Killip published his classification in 1967, the coronary care unit had only existed for about five years — it was introduced by Desmond Julian in Edinburgh in 1961. The classification was developed before thrombolytics, before primary PCI, and before aspirin was a standard therapy. Despite being derived from a cohort of just 250 patients managed with bed rest and oxygen, it has been validated in millions of patients across more than 50 years and across every continent, making it one of the most enduring prognostic tools in all of cardiology.

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Reviewed May 2026
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