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Query: UMLS:C0033377 (prolapse)
11,717 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Among 95 patients with angina pectoris and angiographically documented coronary artery disease (CAD), prolapse of the scallops of the posterior leaflet of the mitral valve (PLMV) was noted in 30 patients. Left ventriculograms in the right anterior oblique (RAO) projection revealed isolated prolapse of the posteromedial commissural scallop (PMCS) in 12 patients and the anterolateral commissural scallop (ALCS) in two patients. Seven patients had prolapse of both PMCS and ALCS, three had prolapse of the PMCS and middle scallop (MS), and six had prolapse of all three scallops of the PLMV. Left ventricular dilatation with increase trabeculations was observed in 19 patients. Contractility determined in a quantitative fashion by segmental motion analysis was markedly impaired in 29 patients. None of the patients had angiographic evidence of mitral insufficiency. Left ventricular dysfunction was documented in 28 patients by either elevated left ventricular end-diastolic pressure (LVEDP), low cardiac index (CI) or decreased ejection fraction (EF). In two patients in whom left ventricular contractility improved after aortocoronary by pass, previously prolapsed scallops could not be identified in the postoperative ventriculogram. Prolapsed PLMV is a frequent angiographic finding in patients with angiographically observed CAD. Impaired contractility of the ventricular myocardium and papillary muscles, left ventricular dilatation, and hypertrophy appear to play a significant role in the pathogenesis of this abnormality through distortion of the directional axis of the papillary muscles, asynergic contraction of the related free wall of the left ventricle, and changes in the normal spatial alignment necessary for mitral valve closure. The syndrome of papillary muscle dysfunction in patients with coronary artery disease represents a wider clinical spectrom than previously described.
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PMID:Mitral valve prolapse and coronary artery disease. Clinical, hemodynamic, and angiographic correlations. 114 6

Mitral valve motion, left ventricular segmental contraction and severity of arterial stenosis were analyzed in 92 patients with coronary artery disease and 28 patients with "atypical chest pain" and normal coronary arterio-rams. Mitral valve motion was evaluated for the presence or absence of leaflet prolapse. Segmental contraction was evaluated by calculating the percent shortening of six chords of the left ventricle measured from right anterior oblique ventriculograms. The severity of disease in each coronary vessel (left anterior descending, left circumflex and right coronary) was graded on a scale of 1 (0 to 30 percent stenosis) to 5 (complete occlusion). Mitral valve prolapse was not suspected clinically but observed angiographically in 15 of 92 patients with coronary artery disease and in 5 of 28 patients with normal coronary arteriograms. In nine patients with coronary artery disease, the prolapse was restricted to the posterior leaflet, in five it was in both the anterior and the posterior leaflets and in one patient in the anterior leaflet only. Mitral regurgitation was noted in seven patients with coronary artery disease; it was mild in six and moderate in one. Among the patients with coronary artery disease, 12 of the 15 (80 percent) with mitral valve prolapse had left ventricular asynergy compared with 63 of the 77 (82 percent) without valve prolapse. The mean scores for severity of disease in the left anterior descending, circumflex and right coronary arteries were, respectively, 4.2, 2.5 and 3.2 in the patients with valve prolapse and 4.2, 2.2 and 3.5 in those without prolapse. In summary, there was no significant correlation between mitral valve prolapse and distribution of coronary arterial obstructions or abnormal patterns of left ventricular segmental contraction. There was a high frequency of mitral valve prolapse in patients with severe coronary artery disease and in those with normal coronary arteriograms and atypical chest pain.
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PMID:Mitral valve prolapse in coronary artery disease. 124 25

In a 14-month period mitral leaflet prolapse was diagnosed in 85 patients by echocardiography or cineangiography. Chest pain alone was the presenting complaint in 30 patients and linked with palpitation, dyspnoea, or syncope in 9. Eleven presented with major neurological disturbances (9 had transient ischaemic attacks), 10 with palpitation, 4 with undue and persistent fatigue, 2 with dyspnoea, and 2 with dizziness. Seventeen were referred not because of symptoms but because of clicks and murmurs. Overall, chest pain affected 61 patients and unless associated with coronary artery disease was not anginal. Palpitation was admitted by 42 patients; dizziness, lightheadedness, or paraesthesiae by 15, and syncope by 12. Systolic auscultatory abnormalities were noted in 69: 25 had single clicks, 3 had multiple clicks, 19 had both click(s) and murmur, and 22 had a murmur alone. Electrocardiography revealed ST segments flat for greater than 0-10 s in 21, prolonged QTc in 18, and T wave flattening or inversion in inferior limb and lateral chest leads in 14. The exercise stress test was abnormal in 13 of 27 patients. Mitral valve echograms showed definite mitral leaflet prolapse in 61, 'possible' prolapse in 14, and were normal in 8 patients with angiographic proof of mitral leaflet prolapse. Cardiac catheterization with left ventriculography showed prolapse of posterior mitral leaflet in 36, of both leaflets in 2, and left ventricular wall motion abnormalities in 16 cases. Selective coronary arteriography in 31 cases showed major vessel narrowing of larger than or equal to 80 per cent lumen diameter in 4, all with angina. This consecutive series indicates that the physical event of mitral leaflet prolapse is more common than hitherto appreciated, is priminently associated with non-anginal chest pain, palpitation, and neurological disturbances, and in 90 per cent of cases could be shown echocardiographically.
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PMID:Clinical features and investigative findings in presence of mitral leaflet prolapse. Study of 85 consecutive patients. 125 39

The incidence of tricuspid valve prolapse and its association with mitral valve prolapse was studied in 100 patients with right- and left-ventricular angiography. Coronary artery disease was present in 81 patients (pts), a dilative cardiomyopathy in 6 pts, and a hypertrophic cardiomyopathy in 2 pts. 11 pts were angiographically normal. A total of 27 pts had a tricuspid valve prolapse, and 15 pts had a mitral valve prolapse. In 19 pts prolapse of the tricuspid valve was isolated, and in 8 pts it was associated with a mitral valve prolapse. The associated finding of a prolapse of the tricuspid and mitral valve was statistically significant (p less than 0.02). Patients with a tricuspid valve prolapse experienced a higher right-ventricular ejection fraction (58 + 10 vs 53 +/- 10%; p less than 0.05) and smaller end-systolic right ventricular volume indices (39 +/- 16 vs 47 +/- 17 ml/m2; p less than 0.05) compared to those without tricuspid valve prolapse. There was no further difference in clinical and hemodynamic parameters between those with and those without tricuspid valve prolapse. The clinical significance of a tricuspid valve prolapse is still undefined.
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PMID:[Incidence of tricuspid valve prolapse]. 187 7

To estimate frequency of the posterior mitral valve leaflet prolapse in routinely performed left ventriculography, 1000 consecutive ventriculograms of the right anterior oblique projection were analyzed. A group of patients consisted of 511 women and 489 men at mean age 46,5 years. Clinical diagnosis of heart lesions, myocardial disease, pulmonary hypertension or arrhythmias were indications for hemodynamic studies. In the investigated group of patients, there were no patients with clinical diagnosis of the coronary artery disease. Prolapse of the posterior mitral valve leaflet was diagnosed in 59 patients. Idiopathic mitral valve prolapse was diagnosed in 10 patients. Prolapse of the posterior mitral valve leaflet was most frequent in atrial septal defect (16.6%), myocardial lesion (12.5%), and after mitral commissurotomy (8.9%). Posterior mitral valve leaflet prolapse is not a frequent anomaly in routinely performed left ventriculography. Relatively often occurrence of the mitral valve prolapse in atrial septal defect and only occasional in the aortic lesions and dilated cardiomyopathy seems to point out at a role of the left ventricle size in pathogenesis of this syndrome.
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PMID:[Mitral valve prolapse detected during hemodynamic studies]. 210 30

Patients with mitral valve prolapse may, even in the absence of associated coronary artery disease or significant mitral regurgitation, have abnormality in exercise left ventricular function. The precise reason for this abnormality, which appears to be age and sex related, is not clear. Abnormal ejection fraction response to exercise cannot be predicted by the nature of symptoms, electrocardiographic changes, arrhythmias, or by extent and severity of mitral valve prolapse by echocardiography. Caution should therefore be exercised in diagnosing associated coronary artery disease based on the ejection fraction response to exercise per se or even on exercise-induced wall motion abnormality. Patients with prolapse, have reduced exercise tolerance, which has been ascribed to reduced left ventricular filling and smaller left ventricular end-diastolic volume in the upright position. Patients with mitral valve prolapse and associated coronary artery disease or significant mitral regurgitation often have, as expected, abnormal left ventricular function during exercise.
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PMID:Exercise left ventricular performance in patients with mitral valve prolapse. 316 78

Ventricular beats are abnormal rhythms which are frequently detected by modern recording techniques in healthy subjects as well as in patients with heart disease. In the first case, analysis of the literature enables us to exclude any pejorative prognostic implication associated with V.E.B., in the absence of any major risk factor for coronary artery disease. However, when there is an underlying heart disease, a number of subgroups can be distinguished with a high risk of sudden death: coronary insufficiency associated with ischaemic cardiomyopathy, especially in the early post-hospital phase after a myocardial infarction; hypertrophic cardiomyopathy with ventricular tachycardia on the Holter monitor, family history of sudden death, personal past history of syncope; mitral prolapse with clinical symptoms and auscultatory signs; idiopathic long QT syndrome. In contrast, V.E.B.s do not appear to have prognostic significance in idiopathic hypokinetic cardiomyopathies and aortic valvular disease. In general, it is more the clinical setting than the actual morphology which determines the prognostic implications of ventricular extrasystoles. The sub-groups at high risk should be treated with anti-arrhythmics, but the evaluation of the effectiveness of such treatment remains uncertain and the authors believe that the development of studies of ventricular stimulation prior to and during treatment are justified.
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PMID:[Ventricular extrasystole: prognostic value and therapeutic indication]. 620 Nov 23

To assess the reliability of M-mode echocardiographic patterns of mitral valve prolapse (MVP) (echo MVP) in detection of morphologic evidence of MVP (morphologic MVP), operatively excised mitral valves and corresponding M-mode echocardiograms from 65 patients with chronic, severe, isolated, pure mitral regurgitation (MR) were studied. Of the 65 patients, 45 (69%) had echo MVP (either holosystolic or mid-to-late systolic prolapse patterns on preoperative M-mode echograms) and 42 (93%) of them had morphologic MVP; of the 3 without morphologic MVP, 2 had ruptured chordae tendineae from infective endocarditis and 1 had papillary muscle dysfunction from atherosclerotic coronary heart disease. Of the 20 patients without echo MVP, 14 (70%) had no morphologic MVP (9 had papillary muscle dysfunction from coronary heart disease, 4 had infective endocarditis on previous normal valves and 1 had rheumatic heart disease). Of the 48 patients with morphologic MVP, 42 (88%) had echo MVP and most had considerably dilated mitral anulae; the other 6 had ruptured chordae tendineae with less degrees of anular dilatation. Of the 17 patients without morphologic MVP, 3 had echo MVP (coronary artery disease in 1 and infective endocarditis on a previous normal valve in 2); of the 14 with neither echo nor morphologic MVP, 9 had papillary muscle dysfunction from coronary artery disease, 4 had infective endocarditis on previously normal valves and 1 had rheumatic heart disease. The patients with very dilated mitral anuli and leaflet areas generally had holosystolic (hammocking) patterns on echo; the patients with small anuli and leaflet areas usually had mid-to-late systolic (buckling) prolapse patterns.
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PMID:Frequency and significance of M-mode echocardiographic evidence of mitral valve prolapse in clinically isolated pure mitral regurgitation: analysis of 65 patients having mitral valve replacement. 669 Dec 50

The etiology and clinical significance of asynchronous relaxation of the left ventricle during isovolumic relaxation period was studied. Fifty patient with angina pectoris, 50 with myocardial infarction, 40 with normal heart, 20 with mitral stenosis and 10 with mitral prolapse syndrome were investigated. Asynchronous relaxation was observed in the following order: 72% in angina pectoris, 46% in myocardial infarction, 30% in mitral valve prolapse and 10% in both pure mitral stenosis and normal heart. In left anterior descending coronary artery disease, asynchronous relaxation was observed in 80%. Asynchronous relaxation seen before aortocoronary bypass graft to the left anterior descending coronary artery either disappeared or decreased after surgery. The contractility of the site, where asynchronous relaxation was seen, was normal in most cases and akinetic in none. The results of this study suggest the possibilities that asynchronous relaxation is at least partially related to localized myocardial ischemia and that it may be an early phenomenon of the effect of myocardial ischemia. With regard to asynchronous relaxation and hemodynamic alterations, force-velocity lissajous was analysed. Distortion of the lissajous in relaxation phase was seen in 73% who showed asynchrony. This distortion can be interpreted as indication of ununiformity of the left ventricular relaxation.
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PMID:Asynchronous relaxation of the ischemic left ventricle. 697 48

The past decade has seen a notable resurgence of interest in the systolic click-murmur syndrome. Previously regarded as extracardiac and benign, it is now clear that these auscultatory findings are central to a disorder characterized by abnormal systolic herniation (prolapse) of the mitral leaflets into the left atrium. Although it may be the result of diverse etiologies, the usual case represents an idiopathic, hereditary disorder of the valve leaflets with pathologic findings similar to those in Marfan's syndrome. The condition is very common and generally benign, and asymptomatic; however, a wide variety of clinical manifestations has been described, with a clinical picture at times indistinguishable from that of coronary artery disease. The small subset of patients at risk for malignant arrhythmias and sudden death has yet to be fully characterized. Although noninvasive techniques generally suffice for the diagnosis of MVP, left ventricular cineangiography is the definitive procedure. It remains for future studies in symptomatic and asymptomatic patients to define the relation between severity of MVP, its clinical manifestations, and its prognosis.
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PMID:Mitral valve prolapse--a review. 698 85


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