Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: UMLS:C0014118 (endocarditis)
15,629 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Fifty adult patients with two-dimensional echocardiograms (2DE) meeting standard diagnostic criteria for mitral valve prolapse (MVP) were studied to evaluate the significance of a positive 2DE by using a new morphologic grading system, a simplified method for annular measurement, and clinical data. Patients with mild (grade I) 2DE MVP differed significantly from those with moderate (grade II) to severe (grade III) 2DE MVP. Mild prolapse patients were predominantly female (p = 0.05) and younger (p less than 0.01). Atypical physical findings were associated with mild MVP while mitral insufficiency murmurs were associated with moderate to severe MVP (p less than 0.0025). When present, atypical chest pain and/or low-grade ventricular ectopy were associated with mild 2DE MVP, while pulmonary congestion, high-grade ectopy, and/or endocarditis were associated with moderate to severe 2DE MVP (p less than 0.001). Symptomatic moderate to severe 2DE MVP patients tended to have large annular dimensions. Additional echocardiographic characteristics of mild 2DE MVP included insensitivity of the parasternal long-axis 2DE view in its detection (p = 0.00002), predominance of anterior leaflet involvement in the apical 2DE view (p = 0.01), and absence of significant difference from age- and sex-matched control subjects in any annular dimension. In contrast, moderate to severe 2DE MVP showed highly significant differences from age- and sex-matched control subjects and from each other in all annular dimensions. Echocardiographically mild MVP defines a subgroup which differs quantitatively and clinically from more advanced morphologic variants. The use of mild 2DE MVP as a diagnostic criterion for MVP should be qualified as being "of questionable diagnostic significance." When present, with or without corroborative auscultatory findings, it may define a subgroup of prolapse at lower risk of significant clinical events or one that represents a normal echocardiographic variant. New grading and annular measurement methodologies provide additional tools for 2DE analysis of MVP with potentially important clinical and prognostic implications.
...
PMID:Two-dimensional echocardiographic mitral valve prolapse: evidence for a relationship of echocardiographic morphology to clinical findings and to mitral annular size. 356 37

The spectrum of recognized cardiac lesions underlying infective endocarditis has been changing as a result of the decline in incidence of rheumatic heart disease, the recognition of the entity of mitral valve prolapse, and the improvement in cardiac diagnostic techniques. Sixty-three cases of native valve endocarditis diagnosed in Memphis hospitals between 1980 and 1984 were reviewed. All diagnoses of underlying cardiac lesions were confirmed by two-dimensional echocardiography, cardiac catheterization, and/or histopathologic examination of valve tissues. Major categories of underlying lesions were as follows: mitral valve prolapse, 29 percent; no underlying disease, 27 percent; degenerative lesions of the aortic or mitral valve, 21 percent; congenital heart disease, 13 percent; rheumatic heart disease, 6 percent. Thus, mitral valve prolapse and, in the elderly, degenerative lesions have displaced rheumatic and congenital heart diseases as the major conditions underlying endocarditis. Redundancy of the mitral valve leaflets was noted in 17 of 18 patients in whom endocarditis was superimposed upon mitral valve prolapse. The risk of infective endocarditis appears to be substantially increased in the subset of patients with mitral valve prolapse who exhibit valvular redundancy.
...
PMID:Underlying cardiac lesions in adults with infective endocarditis. The changing spectrum. 356 26

MVP is a common condition with rare life-threatening implications. Recent follow-up studies over several years in children, and young and middle-aged adults failed to suggest increase in prolapse in most of the subjects. Older individuals with MVP appear to have increased complications, primarily due to mitral regurgitation. Echocardiography supports the diagnosis of MVP made by auscultation in over 90% of individuals, with excellent reproducibility. MVP is more common in young women than young men. The prevalence of prolapse decreases with age in women; it is relatively constant in men. Although complications are rare, MVP is the most common underlying disorder in rupture of the chordae tendineae. These spontaneous ruptures are usually unassociated with infective endocarditis. Familial studies indicate that isolated MVP is an autosomal dominant condition with variable expression. It is recommended that first-degree relatives of patients with isolated prolapse be examined. Infective endocarditis is uncommon, but it is recommended that antibiotic prophylaxis be implemented in patients with prolapse and evidence for mitral regurgitation. Prolapse is frequently associated with autonomic imbalance, primarily an increased catecholamine sensitivity. The use of beta blockers may reverse symptoms secondary to this abnormality. Sudden death is exceedingly rare despite marked arrhythmias in many patients. On the basis of retrospective studies, sudden death is associated with floppy valves, marked mitral regurgitation, and arrhythmias. There is no evidence that any class of antiarrhythmic agents can prevent the rare sudden deaths in these patients.
...
PMID:Mitral valve prolapse: recent advances in diagnosis and therapy. 372 Feb 68

From March 1969 to March 1984, 89 children aged 2 to 12 years (mean 8.3 +/- 2.5) with acquired mitral valve incompetence underwent mitral repair using Carpentier's techniques. There were 84 cases of rheumatic valve disease, four cases of endocarditis, and one case of Barlow's syndrome. Valve dysfunction was classified into three types: type I (normal leaflet motion), five patients; type II (prolapsed leaflet), 74 patients; and type III (restricted leaflet motion), 10 patients. Cumulative follow-up was 546 patient/years. At 10 years, 90% of the patients were still alive, with an incidence of valve-related death of 5.5%; 98% of the patients were free of thromboembolism, 78% were free of reoperation, and 69% of the patients were free of any complications related to valve repair. We conclude that whenever feasible (92% of the cases in our experience), mitral valve repair using valvuloplasty techniques is the preferred procedure in the surgical treatment of acquired mitral valve incompetence in children.
...
PMID:Long-term results of valve repair in children with acquired mitral valve incompetence. 374 66

Little information is available concerning the progression of mild to severe mitral regurgitation (MR) in patients with mitral valve prolapse (MVP). This study reports 86 patients, average age 60 years, who presented with cardiac symptoms, precordial systolic murmur, severe MR and a high incidence of MVP on echocardiography (57 of 75 [75%] ) and left ventriculography (61 of 84 [73%] ). Seventy-five surgically excised mitral valves appeared grossly enlarged and floppy. Histologic studies showed extensive myxomatous changes throughout the leaflets and chordae. Eighty patients had had precordial murmurs first described at average age 34 years, but the average age at which symptoms of cardiac dysfunction appeared was 59. However, once symptoms developed, mitral valve surgery was required within 1 year in 67 of 76 patients who had undergone surgery. Atrial fibrillation, present in 48 of 86 patients (56%), or ruptured chordae tendineae, present in 39 of 76 patients (51%), may have contributed to this rapid progression and deterioration. Additionally, 13 patients had a remote history of documented infective endocarditis. Twenty-eight patients had at least 1 type of serial clinical evaluation that indicated progressive MR in all 28 patients on the basis of changing auscultatory findings (24 of 26), progressive radiographic cardiomegaly (24 of 25), echocardiographic left atrial enlargement (4.3 to 5 cm in 11 patients) and angiographically worsening MR (14 of 15). Twenty-four of these patients had evidence of MVP on at least 1 of their initial studies. Thus, mild MR due to MVP and myxomatous mitral valves is a progressive disease in some patients with MVP.
...
PMID:Evidence for progression from mild to severe mitral regurgitation in mitral valve prolapse. 376 17

To determine factors influencing the strength of association between mitral valve prolapse and mitral regurgitation, ruptured chordae tendineae, and infective endocarditis, the prevalence of mitral prolapse in patients with disease was compared with both clinical and population control groups. The prevalence of mitral valve prolapse was 4 percent among population and clinical control groups (eight of 196 and 84 of 2,146, respectively) and was significantly higher (p less than 0.001) in patients with endocarditis (11 of 67, 16 percent), mitral regurgitation (17 of 31, 55 percent, and ruptured chordae (27 of 43, 63 percent). Odds ratios for complications in persons with mitral valve prolapse ranged from 4.6 for endocarditis to 41.4 for ruptured chordae in overall analyses, and from 6.8 for endocarditis to 53.0 for ruptured chordae based on age- and sex-matched case-control triplets (p less than 0.001 for each). All complications occurred disproportionately in men with mitral valve prolapse, in whom odds ratios ranged from 2.5 to 7.4 compared with an additional control group of unselected subjects with mitral valve prolapse. Compared with this control group, patients with mitral valve prolapse and endocarditis were slightly more likely to have a previously known heart murmur (odds ratio 3.2, difference not significant) but significantly more likely to have murmurs at the time of evaluation (odds ratio 8.5, p less than 0.01). Patients with mitral valve prolapse and mitral regurgitation and ruptured chordae tendineae were also significantly older than the unselected subjects with mitral valve prolapse (48 +/- 14 and 55 +/- 16 versus 38 +/- 14 years, p less than 0.005 for both). The concentration of risk of endocarditis in men with mitral valve prolapse and patients with antecedent murmur suggests that antibiotic prophylaxis is warranted in these groups but not in women without a murmur of mitral regurgitation.
...
PMID:Complications of mitral valve prolapse. Disproportionate occurrence in men and older patients. 377 83

One hundred forty-five patients (74 women, 71 men), aged 60 years and older, with echocardiographically documented mitral valve prolapse were studied. One hundred sixteen patients had precordial systolic murmurs, 20 of whom were suspected of having mitral valve prolapse before the echocardiographic study. Infective endocarditis occurred in 7 patients, cerebral ischemic events in 13 and spontaneous rupture of chordae tendineae in 33. Four other patients had ruptured chordae tendineae associated with infective endocarditis. Congestive heart failure was present in 35 patients, 11 of whom had undergone mitral valve surgery.
...
PMID:Frequency of complications of mitral valve prolapse in subjects aged 60 years and older. 378 9

The risk of infective endocarditis (IE) associated with a systolic murmur in patients with mitral valve prolapse (MVP) was investigated in a case-control study. The case group comprised all patients with MVP (n = 19) from a series of 136 consecutive adult admissions for IE. Three matched control subjects were chosen for each case from a series of 144 MVP patients without IE. Seventeen of the 19 cases (89%) had documented evidence of systolic murmurs existing before the IE episode; systolic murmurs were documented in 25 of the 57 control subjects (47%). The data indicate a significant increase in the risk of IE in MVP patients with a systolic murmur (p less than 0.01). The absolute probability of IE developing in a patient with MVP and a murmur was estimated to be approximately 1 in 1,400 per year; this was 35 times greater than the probability in a patient with MVP without a murmur. The results suggest that by restricting prophylaxis to MVP patients with a systolic murmur, cover would be provided for almost 90% of those with MVP in whom IE would be likely to develop.
...
PMID:Risk of infective endocarditis in mitral valve prolapse with and without precordial systolic murmurs. 381 19

Mitral valve prolapse is extremely common in children. It is diagnosed by the presence of a nonejection click with or without an associated murmur. In isolated mitral valve prolapse, the prognosis is excellent, but regular office visits are necessary for cardiac status review and infective endocarditis prophylaxis. Patients with significant dysrhythmias represent a small subset with an unknown long-term prognosis.
...
PMID:Mitral valve prolapse in children. 382 53

Mitral valve prolapse, diagnosed by auscultation of typical midsystolic clicks and late systolic murmurs or by echocardiographic demonstration of definite systolic protrusion of the mitral leaflets into the left atrium, is the commonest human abnormality of heart valves, affecting roughly 4 per cent of the population. The most important clinical features of mitral valve prolapse include palpitations and small but definite risks of infective endocarditis or significant mitral regurgitation in middle age, or later. Current evidence suggests that mitral prolapse is due to an inherited abnormality in connective tissue, which causes thoracic bony abnormalities and reduced body weight and blood pressure, in addition to the changes in the mitral valve.
...
PMID:Mitral valve prolapse. 384 8


<< Previous 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Next >>