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    Subjects/Physiology/Cardiovascular System
    Cardiovascular System
    medium
    heart-pulse Physiology

    C wave of JVP represents?

    A. Passive filling of right atrium
    B. Tricuspid bulge into right atrium during isovolumetric ventricular contraction
    C. Contraction of right atrium
    D. Passive emptying of right atrium

    Explanation

    ## Correct Answer: B. Tricuspid bulge into right atrium during isovolumetric ventricular contraction The C wave (or CV wave) of the jugular venous pulse represents the **bulging of the tricuspid valve into the right atrium during isovolumetric ventricular contraction**. This occurs immediately after the QRS complex on the ECG, when the right ventricle begins to contract but the tricuspid valve has not yet opened. As ventricular pressure rises rapidly, the tricuspid valve leaflets are pushed backward (bulge) into the right atrial cavity, causing a transient rise in right atrial pressure that is transmitted to the jugular vein. This is a passive mechanical phenomenon—not active atrial contraction. The C wave is best visualized in the JVP tracing as a small positive deflection that occurs during ventricular systole, between the X descent (atrial relaxation) and the V wave (passive venous filling). In clinical practice, an exaggerated or prominent C wave may indicate tricuspid regurgitation, where the valve incompetence allows forceful ventricular contraction to directly transmit pressure into the atrium. Understanding the timing and mechanism of the C wave is essential for interpreting abnormal JVP patterns in conditions like right ventricular hypertrophy, pulmonary hypertension, and valvular disease—common presentations in Indian cardiac clinics. ## Why the other options are wrong **A. Passive filling of right atrium** — This describes the V wave, not the C wave. Passive filling occurs during ventricular systole after the tricuspid valve closes, when blood accumulates in the right atrium from the superior and inferior venae cavae. The V wave rises as the atrium fills passively and reaches its peak just before the tricuspid valve opens. The C wave occurs earlier, during isovolumetric contraction, and is caused by valve bulging, not passive filling. **C. Contraction of right atrium** — This describes the A wave, which occurs during atrial systole (just before the QRS complex). The A wave represents active atrial contraction pushing blood into the right ventricle. The C wave is entirely passive—it results from mechanical bulging of the tricuspid valve, not from atrial muscle contraction. Confusing A and C waves is a common NBE trap in JVP interpretation. **D. Passive emptying of right atrium** — This describes the X descent, which occurs during ventricular systole as the atrium relaxes and the tricuspid valve bulges inward (the C wave itself). The X descent is the downslope after the C wave peak, representing atrial emptying as blood is drawn into the expanding right ventricle. The C wave is the upslope caused by valve bulging, not the emptying phase that follows it. ## High-Yield Facts - **C wave timing**: occurs during isovolumetric ventricular contraction, immediately after QRS on ECG, before the X descent - **C wave mechanism**: passive tricuspid valve bulge into right atrium—NOT active atrial contraction - **Prominent C wave**: suggests tricuspid regurgitation or right ventricular dysfunction; seen in pulmonary hypertension and RV infarction - **JVP wave sequence**: A (atrial systole) → X descent (atrial relaxation + valve bulge) → C wave (valve bulge peak) → V wave (passive filling) → Y descent (atrial emptying) - **Clinical correlation**: absent or diminished C wave may indicate atrial fibrillation or tricuspid stenosis; giant C wave is pathognomonic for severe TR ## Mnemonics **AVX-CV sequence** A = Atrial contraction; V = Venous filling (passive); X = eXpansion of ventricle (atrial relaxation); C = Cusp bulge (valve bulge); V = Venous filling again. Remember: A and C are both positive waves (upstrokes), but A is active (muscle) and C is passive (valve mechanics). ## NBE Trap NBE commonly pairs the C wave with "atrial contraction" (option A or C) to trap students who memorize JVP waves without understanding the underlying physiology. The discriminating fact is that C wave is purely mechanical (valve bulging), not muscular (atrial contraction). ## Clinical Pearl In Indian cardiac practice, a prominent or "giant" C wave on bedside JVP examination is a red flag for severe tricuspid regurgitation—often secondary to pulmonary hypertension from chronic lung disease or rheumatic heart disease. Recognizing this sign at the bedside can guide urgent echocardiography and right heart catheterization, particularly in patients with cor pulmonale. _Reference: Guyton & Hall Textbook of Medical Physiology, Ch. 9 (Cardiac Muscle; The Heart as a Pump); Harrison's Principles of Internal Medicine, Ch. 227 (Physical Examination of the Cardiovascular System)_

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