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

To compare the hemodynamic results of different anuloplasty techniques of primary valve repair for mitral regurgitation, 122 patients were prospectively studied with Doppler echocardiograms 5 to 10 days after operation. Seventy-seven patients had mitral valve prolapse, 27 had coronary artery disease, 13 patients had rheumatic mitral valve lesions and 5 patients had infective endocarditis. Forty-eight patients received the flexible Duran ring, 46 received the more rigid Carpentier ring and 28 patients received no ring. Doppler echocardiography demonstrated a significant decrease in mitral valve area estimated by the pressure half-time method in patients who received either a Carpentier (2.6 +/- 0.8 cm2) or Duran ring (2.8 +/- 0.8 cm2) when compared with patients who received no ring (3.2 +/- 0.7 cm2) (p = 0.01). No significant differences were observed for peak transmitral diastolic velocity, peak transmitral diastolic gradient, or the grade of mitral regurgitation by color flow Doppler mapping between patients with and without rings. The etiology of mitral disease and concomitant surgical procedures accompanying mitral valve repair did not significantly influence mitral valve area, peak velocity or peak gradient. These data suggest that Carpentier and Duran rings decrease the hemodynamic mitral valve area; however, the decrease in valve area is small and not associated with a clinically important increase in transvalvular gradient.
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PMID:Doppler echocardiographic comparison of the Carpentier and Duran anuloplasty rings versus no ring after mitral valve repair for mitral regurgitation. 199 83

From 1984 to 1988, 129 mitral valve reconstructions were done for primary pure mitral regurgitation. Sixty-two (48%) were done for myxomatous degeneration and prolapse of the mitral valve. Anterior leaflet resection was performed in seven patients, posterior leaflet resection in 46, anteroposterior resection in four; five patients received only a ring annuloplasty. Eight patients had coronary bypass grafts. Twenty-four patients received a Carpentier-Edwards annuloplasty ring, 24 a Duran ring, and 14 patients had no ring. Follow-up was 1 to 50 months (mean, 13 months). No patient was lost to follow-up. There was one operative death from gastrointestinal bleeding and two late deaths (one from suicide and one from a myocardial infarction), and the probability of survival at 48 months was 84% +/- 15%. There were no thromboembolic episodes or episodes of endocarditis. However, there were five reoperations (9%) with freedom from reoperation at 48 months of 85% +/- 5%. There was one major anticoagulant hemorrhage. Freedom from all morbidity at 48 months was 81% +/- 8%. Postoperative echocardiographic data in the three different groups of patients undergoing repair on the basis of annuloplasty treatment showed that the peak gradient was less and the valve area was slightly greater with no annuloplasty ring.
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PMID:Mitral valve repair for myxomatous degeneration and prolapse of the mitral valve. 281 29

Mitral valve repair has been increasingly used at our hospital for mitral regurgitation with and without coronary disease. From January, 1984, to June, 1987, of 338 patients undergoing all forms of mitral valve surgery, 140 had first-time surgery for pure mitral regurgitation: 75 had valve repair, and 65 had valve replacement. Thirty-three of 75 (44%) had concomitant coronary bypass in the repair group, while 21 of 65 (32%) had coronary bypass in the replacement group. The mean functional class (3.4 versus 3.5), age (60 versus 61 years), and preoperative hemodynamics were similar in both groups. The cause of mitral regurgitation in the repair group was myxomatous change in 32 patients, ischemia in 27, rheumatic valve disease in 12, and endocarditis in 4. A Carpentier ring was used in 46, a Duran ring was used in 11, and none was used in 18. The operative mortality was 3 of 75 patients (4%) in the repair group, all with coronary artery bypass grafting, versus 2 of 65 patients (3%) in the replacement group, 1 of whom had undergone coronary artery bypass grafting. The mean postoperative functional class 15 months postoperatively was 1.12 in the repair group versus 1.15 in the replacement group. There were 7 late deaths in the replacement group and only 3 late deaths in the repair group. Actuarial survival at 30 months was 85 +/- 6% for the replacement group and 94 +/- 4% for the repair group. There were 5 late emboli (1 fatal, 4 nonfatal) after valve replacement and none after valve repair (p = 0.03).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Comparative morbidity of mitral valve repair versus replacement for mitral regurgitation with and without coronary artery disease. 325 47

Fungal endocarditis is rare and is usually caused by Aspergillus and Candida species. We present a patient with endocarditis caused by Scopulariopsis brevicaulis. The patient had a history of mitral valve disease and, 1 year earlier, had undergone valvuloplasty with the placement of a prosthetic Duran ring in the mitral valve position. S. brevicaulis was cultured from samples of a large vegetation on the mitral valve apparatus. The mitral valve was replaced with a St. Jude mechanical prosthesis. The patient was treated with amphotericin B but was later switched to oral itraconazole when antibiotic tests indicated susceptibility to that agent. We believe this is the 1st reported case of endocarditis caused by Scopulariopsis.
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PMID:Scopulariopsis endocarditis associated with Duran ring valvuloplasty. 778 75

The myxomatous, degenerated, prolapsed or "floppy" mitral valve is the most common cause of mitral regurgitation in North America. Mitral valve reconstruction for mitral regurgitation was carried out in 219 consecutive patients with a myxomatous mitral valve from 1984 to 1993. Of the 139 men and 80 women, 23 to 84 years of age (mean 63 years), 36% of patients were 70 years of age or older, 77% were in New York Heart Association functional class III or IV, and 29% had coronary artery disease necessitating coronary bypass. The most common operation was posterior leaflet resection (161 patients [73%]). The anterior leaflet was resected in 14 patients, and both the anterior and posterior leaflets were resected in 15 patients. A variety of other techniques were used, including commissuroplasty and use of annuloplasty rings. A flexible Duran ring was used in 111 patients (51%), a Carpentier-Edwards ring in 44 patients (20%), and no ring was used in 64 patients (29%). Five operative deaths occurred (2.3%); four of the five deaths occurred in patients 70 years of age or older (5.1%); and one in 141 patients (0.7%) was younger than 70 years of age. In the late postoperative period (mean follow-up 2 years), 90% of patients had no symptoms, two had endocarditis, and seven patients had thromboemboli (transient in four, permanent in three). Structural valve degeneration requiring reoperation occurred late in 12 patients; eight were in posterior leaflet resection and two in anterior or anterior and posterior; six of 12 had no annuloplasty ring. The incidence of structural valve degeneration was less than 5% from 1990 to 1993. No systolic anterior motion of the mitral valve was seen with postoperative echocardiography before discharge. Actuarial analysis at 5 years for overall survival was 86% +/- 5%, freedom from infectious valve degeneration 97% +/- 2%, and freedom from thromboembolism 94% +/- 3%. Freedom from structural valve degeneration overall was 83% +/- 4%, with a flexible ring it was 89% +/- 6%, with a rigid ring it was 88% +/- 6%, and with no ring it was 67% +/- 12% (p = 0.03). Mitral valve reconstruction for complicated myxomatous disease of the mitral valve, regardless of leaflet involvement, is feasible and offers excellent early and late results.
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PMID:Long-term results of mitral valve reconstruction for regurgitation of the myxomatous mitral valve. 828 77