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Query: UMLS:C0033377 (
prolapse
)
11,717
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
From 1946 to March 1989, 92 patients (33 women and 59 men) were seen with ventricular septal defect (VSD) and audible aortic regurgitation (AR). The VSD was subcristal in 62 patients, subpulmonary in 21 and unknown in the remaining 9. The median age of onset of AR was 5.3 years. The risk of developing AR was 2.5 times greater in those with a subpulmonary VSD. The aortic valve was tricuspid in 90% and bicuspid in 10%.
Prolapse
was seen in 90% of those with subcristal VSD and in all with subpulmonary VSD. Pulmonary stenosis was seen in 46% of the patients with gradients ranging from 10 to 55 mm Hg. The incidence of infective
endocarditis
was 15 episodes/1,000 patient years. Among 20 patients followed medically, for 297 patient years, 1 died (1959) and most have been stable, including 2 followed for greater than 30 years. In the 72 patients operated on, there were 15 perioperative and 5 late deaths. Operations consisted of VSD closure alone in 7, VSD closure and valvuloplasty in 50 and VSD closure and aortic valve replacement in the other 15. Valvuloplasty was more effective in those operated on under age 10 compared to those older than 15 years (46 vs 14%). The durability of the valvuloplasty was 76% at 12 years and 51% at 18 years.
...
PMID:Long follow-up (to 43 years) of ventricular septal defect with audible aortic regurgitation. 236 80
In particular since the introduction of the two-dimensional approach, echocardiography as a non-invasive and easily repeatable bedside-technique without side-effects plays a central role within the diagnostic tools of cardiology. The following applications of cardiac ultrasound are commonly accepted and sufficiently validated: Assessment of the size of cardiac chambers including qualitative and quantitative evaluation of left ventricular function, detection of pericardial effusion, diagnosis of intra- and extracardiac tumors and thrombi, analysis of complex congenital diseases. Without the use of Doppler, valvular regurgitations can only be suspected by indirect parameters; in contrast, stenotic lesions as well as a variety of other valve abnormalities (calcifications/partial rupture/
prolapse
/vegetations) can be diagnosed with a high accuracy. Transesophageal echocardiography guarantees not only an optimal imaging quality in virtually all patients, in addition, the technique allows the routine visualization of the thoracic descending aorta and the left atrial appendage which is of importance for the diagnosis of aortic dissection and isolated left atrial appendage thrombi. Transesophageal echocardiography is also superior to the conventional precordial approach concerning the assessment of prosthetic valve malfunction (in particular in mitral position) and
endocarditis
-associated abscesses. Today, the echocardiographic visualization of coronary arteries is without clinical relevance.
...
PMID:[The status of echocardiography within the scope of routine cardiologic diagnosis]. 269 44
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.
...
PMID:Mitral valve repair for myxomatous degeneration and prolapse of the mitral valve. 281 29
Mitral-valve
prolapse
is a common cardiac valvular disorder with a wide range of severity and diverse clinical outcomes. The lack of a standard definition of mitral-valve
prolapse
may explain the variation in reported complication rates. To identify high-risk and low-risk subgroups, we retrospectively analyzed clinical and two-dimensional echocardiographic data from 456 patients with mitral-valve
prolapse
. Mitral-valve
prolapse
was defined on the basis of echocardiographic findings as systolic displacement into the left atrium of one or both leaflets beyond the plane of the mitral annulus in the parasternal long-axis view. Two groups of patients were compared: those with thickening of the mitral-valve leaflets and redundancy (designated the classic form; n = 319) and those without leaflet thickening (designated the nonclassic form; n = 137). The two groups were similar in age and sex ratio. Complications or a history of complications was more prevalent in the classic than the nonclassic form: infective
endocarditis
, 3.5 percent and 0 percent, respectively (P less than 0.02); moderate-to-severe mitral regurgitation, 12 percent and 0 percent (P less than 0.001); and the need for mitral-valve replacement, 6.6 percent and 0.7 percent (P less than 0.02). However, the frequency of stroke was similar in the two groups: 7.5 percent and 5.8 percent (P not significant). We conclude that in a selected population of patients with mitral-valve
prolapse
, those with the classic form (leaflet thickening and redundancy) are at higher risk than those without these features for the infectious and hemodynamic complications of mitral-valve
prolapse
, but not for stroke.
...
PMID:Identification of high-risk and low-risk subgroups of patients with mitral-valve prolapse. 292 82
The gross criteria for diagnosing prolapsing mitral valve are: 1. interchordal hooding of the involved leaflets, 2. hooding or doming of leaflets towards the left atrium, 3. elongation of the involved leaflets resulting in an increase in valve area, 4. dilatation of the valve annulus in patients with severe mitral regurgitation. The posterior leaflet is most frequently affected. The involved leaflets, in general, are thickened, soft, greyish white and have a smooth atrial surface. Chordae tendineae are described as elongated, tortuous and attenuated or thinned. Deviations from normal chordal insertion have recently been observed which possibly appear to represent the underlying abnormality. Microscopic findings include significant thickening of the spongiosa and the fibrosa, changes in dense collagen fibers in the atrialis layer, occasionally, with fibrin platelet deposits. Histochemical characterization of changes in the spongiosa may also be helpful in the diagnosis. Ultrastructurally, there may be changes in collagen and elastic fibers as well as myxoid areas. On comparison of findings in surgically-removed mitral valves with those of control specimens from autopsy patients with no cardiac abnormalities, the length of the anterior and posterior leaflet as well as the annular ring diameter was larger in the valves with
prolapse
. Two-dimensional echocardiography accurately assessed leaflet length when compared to morphologic measurements, however, the annular diameter during systole or diastole was smaller. In patients with mitral regurgitation requiring surgery, mitral valve prolapse is the most common cause. Annular ring dilatation and chordae tendineae rupture appear to contribute substantially to incurrence of the mitral regurgitation. The heart weight is increased in the majority of patients with symptomatic mitral valve prolapse but normal, however, in those without symptoms. The most frequent complication of mitral valve prolapse is mitral regurgitation with or without congestive heart failure. Patients with redundant leaflets may be at high risk of sudden death. Young women with abnormal resting ECG, prolonged Q-T interval, family history of sudden death or complex ventricular arrhythmias may also be at a greater risk of sudden death. The incidence of infective
endocarditis
appears higher in those with redundant than in those with nonredundant valves. The incidence of cerebral ischemic events is low.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
...
PMID:The pathology of mitral valve prolapse. 304 84
The syndrome of primary mitral leaflet billow, with or without
prolapse
, is associated with myxomatous degeneration of the mitral valve apparatus, mainly the posterior leaflet, and the syndrome may be familial. It manifests clinically with an isolated nonejection systolic click (billow), a murmur of mitral regurgitation that is usually late systolic (
prolapse
), or a combination of murmur and click. Echocardiography identifies and assesses the extent of the billowing of mitral leaflet bodies but there are no specific echocardiographic criteria that can differentiate normal from pathological billowing. Similarly, a prolapsed leaflet is not detected echocardiographically when there is localized and mild failure of leaflet edge apposition but a more severely prolapsed, or flail, leaflet can be demonstrated and confirmed by that technique. Symptoms of the syndrome include anxiety, chest pain and palpitations. The resting electrocardiogram may show ST segment and T wave abnormalities. The majority of patients have a benign course and require reassurance only. Complications include systemic emboli, infective
endocarditis
, progression to severe mitral regurgitation, arrhythmias and, rarely, sudden death. Patients with
prolapse
of a leaflet edge are more likely to develop complications than those with only billowing of the leaflet bodies. Surgery, preferably valvuloplasty, is required for severe regurgitation and may also be indicated for potentially lethal tachyarrhythmias unresponsive to medical therapy. Mitral leaflet billow and
prolapse
may be secondary to, or associated with, many conditions. The prognosis is then principally that of the underlying disease of which ischemic heart disease and hypertrophic cardiomyopathy are the most important.
...
PMID:Mitral valve billowing and prolapse: perspective at 25 years. 304 85
The discrepancies reported in various studies with respect to long-term prognosis in mitral valve prolapse can be attributed to the criteria employed for diagnosis and to the differing patient populations studied. Furthermore, mitral valve prolapse is not a single, well-defined disease but reflects rather a broad spectrum of a disease process. Echocardiographically, patients can be identified with redundant, thickened leaflets with excessive mitral valve motion and
prolapse
as well as those with normal appearing leaflets but systolic
prolapse
representative of differing disease processes with differing prognosis. The incidence of sudden cardiac death is estimated at a low value of 1.9/10,000 patients per year. In the presence of a normal resting ECG, with no hemodynamically-meaningful mitral regurgitation and no evidence of redundant mitral leaflets the risk is even less. Cerebral embolic events occur with an estimated incidence of 1/6000 patients per year, similarly low; it can be assumed that patients with very myxomatous, redundant mitral leaflets have the highest risk. The incidence of infective
endocarditis
is also low, estimated at 1/5725 patients per year (0.175%). Risk factors for complications include: a systolic murmur, advanced age, male sex and leaflet redundancy. The most important complication is mitral regurgitation for which the incidence is highest in older men and in the presence of left ventricular, dilatation.
...
PMID:Follow-up observations in patients with mitral valve prolapse. 305 85
It is not easy to evaluate the prognosis of mitral valve prolapse. First of all, a positive diagnosis is difficult: the clinical insufficiencies are ill-compensated by sonocardiography as it is less reliable than expected; the very existence of the "mitral valve prolapse" described by Barlow is being challenged. Secondly, the most severe complications of mitral
prolapse
are rare, with respect to its frequency. Some complications are currently well defined. Thus, severe mitral insufficiency, leading to valve replacement, affects elderly men more than young women, although the pathological lesions correspond to the same disease.
Endocarditis
is rare and only occurs when there is an audible murmur. Rhythm disorders are varied, with however, frequent junction tachycardias and a marked influence of catecholamines, which may explain the clinical effectiveness of beta-blockers. Unfortunately, severe complications are not as well known. Thus, the risk of sudden death and cerebral vascular accident cannot be figured out from large statistical studies. Only studies of some so called "risk" sub-groups, should allow a better knowledge of these two complications and a more effective prevention.
...
PMID:[Evaluation of the prognosis of mitral valve prolapse]. 332 56
We studied 53 episodes (51 patients) of tricuspid valvular
endocarditis
caused by Staphylococcus aureus in a predominantly addicted population and correlated two-dimensional echocardiographic findings with clinical outcome. Thirty-eight episodes with (vs 15 episodes without) tricuspid vegetations on the two-dimensional echocardiogram were significantly associated with (1) longer duration of fever on therapy (mean of 12.3 days vs 6.8 days, respectively; p less than 0.005); and (2) higher frequency of increased right ventricular end-diastolic (RVED) dimension (25 of 38 cases [66 percent] vs two of 15 cases [13 percent], respectively; p less than 0.01). Only patients with increased RVED dimension (5/25; 20 percent) required tricuspid valvular surgery for prolonged fever or progressive right-sided heart failure (p less than 0.05 vs patients with normal RVED dimension). Tricuspid vegetations greater than 1.0 cm identified a subset of patients at increased risk for developing clinical right-sided heart failure during the active or convalescent phase of
endocarditis
(p less than 0.02 vs patients with tricuspid vegetations less than 1.0 cm). An unexpectedly high prevalence of asymptomatic
prolapse
of the mitral valve was observed in this population (23 of 53 episodes; 43 percent). Detection of tricuspid vegetations in patients with
endocarditis
due to S aureus is not a primary indication for early surgery, but identifies patients more likely to exhibit short-term and long-term complications of their infection.
...
PMID:Tricuspid valve endocarditis due to Staphylococcus aureus. Correlation of two-dimensional echocardiography with clinical outcome. 333 91
Because auscultatory findings may vary greatly among patients with suspected mitral valve prolapse, careful examination is essential to avoid diagnostic misinterpretation. The presence of mitral valve prolapse can be confirmed by echocardiography. Clinicians should be reluctant to attribute symptoms to the echo or physical finding of
prolapse
. Prognosis in the vast majority of patients is excellent, and reassurance is a critical element of successful patient management.
Endocarditis
prophylaxis and periodic follow-up examinations are appropriate for patients with mitral regurgitation.
...
PMID:Mitral valve prolapse. Practical aspects of diagnosis and management. 335 61
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