The first heart murmurs were described more than 200 years ago (Rishaniw 2018).
The Parisian physician Rene Theophile Hyacinthe Laennec (1781 - 1826) used the ear trumpet he developed during his rounds in a clinic for lung patients and thus developed a vocabulary for normal, abnormal and pathological murmurs (Schoon 2012).
The Graham- Steell sound is named after its first describer (Graham Steell 1851 - 1942) (Kasper 2015).
In 1907, Carey Franklin Coombs (1879 - 1932) first described the Carey- Coombs noise named after him (Robbins 2022).
Austin Flint (1812 - 1886), a New York internist, suspected the mechanism of origin to be aortic valve insufficiency already in the mid-19th century and therefore the Austin Flint murmur was named after him (Gahl 2014).