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

The syndrome of mitral valve prolapse was diagnosed by means of echocardiography in 11 of 28 top-class athletes with functional systolic murmurs and in 4 of 16 athletes examined irrespective of the physical findings and complaints. The echocardiographic manifestations of the prolapse consisted in delayed systolic flexion of the posterior cusp (3 cases), early systolic prolapse of the posterior cusp (4) and holosystolic prolapse of both cusps (8). It is concluded that the syndrome of mitral valve prolapse occurs in athletes far more often than generally supposed and may be the cause of systolic murmurs, and the development of myocardial dystrophy due to chronic physical overstrain and disorders of cardiac rhythm.
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PMID:[Mitral valve prolapse syndrome in athletes]. 45 29

Despite what was considered adequate pharmacological treatment, the condition of six patients with severe mitral valve prolapse but with trivial or no mitral regurgitation deteriorated. These patients had marked weakness, chest pain, dyspnea, and arrhythmias. Because these patients found their condition to be intolerable, the prolapsed mitral valve was repaired. Electrocardiography, treadmill stress testing, and left ventirculography performed following operation showed complete repair of the valve and significant improvement over the preoperative findings in all six patients. Repair of the floppy mitral valve did not eradicate all abnormalities; however, it did significantly improve the chest pain, weakness, dyspnea, and arrhythmias in all six patients. Five patients no longer require any medication. The prolapsed mitral valve contributed significantly to the symptoms and arrhythmias, but it could not have been the sole cause for these patients' signs and symptoms. With complete correction of the prolapse in all six patients, few of the signs and symptoms of the disease persisted. Repair of severe mitral valve prolapse without mitral regurgitation is recommended only for those patients who continue to be severely symptomatic from chest pain, dyspnea, or ventricular arrhythmias after an extensive trial of adequate medical therapy.
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PMID:Surgical correction of severe mitral prolapse without mitral insufficiency but with pronounced cardiac arrhythmias. 45 34

Clinical and echocardiographic examinations were performed on 100 clinically stable, newborn baby girls. Mitral valve prolapse was noted on the echocardiograms of seven babies. Three subjects had systolic clicks, two of whom had systolic murmurs following the click. The four other babies who had echocardiographic evidence of mitral valve prolapse had no abnormal auscultatory signs. Of the 93 babies without evidence of mitral prolapse, 91 had normal echocardiograms and auscultatory features; one was noted to have a murmur consistent with a ventricular septal defect, and another had an eccentric aortic valve on the echocardiogram which was suggestive of a bicuspid aortic valve. Serial studies on our group of subjects will yield useful information regarding the natural history of mitral valve prolapse.
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PMID:Incidence of mitral valve prolapse in one hundred clinically stable newborn baby girls: an echocardiographic study. 47 76

Echocardiographic assessment of left ventricle functions was performed in 52 cases with idiopathic prolapse of mitral valve, confirmed on the base of the simultaneous presence of the well known auscultatory, phonocardiographic and echocardiographic criteria. Mitral prolapse was established not to be a homogenous group as regards left ventricle function. The majority of the cases (80.7%) had normal EchoC-indices for the pump and total and local contraction function of left ventricle. The cases without (25%) or with light stage (55.7%) mitral regurgitation are included here. In the presence of hemodynamic significant mitral insufficiency -- 13.5% of the cases. EchoC-manifestations for volume left-ventricle loading were found -- enlarged telediastolic dimension and volume of the left ventricle cavity, light hypertrophy and hypercontractility of the interventricular septum and/or the unattached posterior wall of left ventricle, enlarged left ventricle, increased velocity of EF-segment of the anterior mitral cusp. As a rule, a moderate mitral regurgitation is concerned in those cases. In a small number of cases with mitral prolapse (5.8%) EchoC-manifestations for a light to moderate pump and general and/or local contraction function of left ventricle was established without clinical data for a stasis in left ventricle cardiac insufficiency. Grounds exist to admit that in the last cases, a rather not severe local or more diffuse lesion of the left ventricle myocardium is concerned, its relationship with the mitral valve prolapse remaining obscure.
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PMID:[Echocardiographic evaluation of left ventricular function in mitral valve prolapse]. 49 32

ECG, PCG, CSG and ACG were synchronously recorded in 25 patient with non-expulsion click syndrome -- telesystolic murmur as well as in 62 cardiac healthy subjects. With the investigation of the systolic and diastolic intervals, a prolongation of the transformation period was established (Q--1 = 72 +/- 12 msec) and a shortening of the isovolumetric relaxation (A2--0 = 63 +/- 10 msec). The ratio PPE/LVET (period prior to expulsion/left venticular expulsion time) is normal in patients with nonexpulsion click -- telesystolic apical murmur but the comparison of PPE/LVET with a normal contraction with that of the first post extrasystolic contraction shows a statistically significant shortening. The ratio PPE/LVET in prolapse of the mitral valve prior to extrasystole is 0.39 +/- 0.02, and during the first contraction with intensified stroke after a compensatory pause is 0.31 +/- 0.03 (p less than 0.02). The possibility for explanation of the changes in phase analysis are discussed and a conclusion is drawn that they reflect the existence of deviation in the left ventricular mechanics and hemodynamics in case of mitral valve prolapse.
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PMID:[Phase analysis of the normal and postectopic left ventricular contractions in nonejection click-telesystolic apical murmur syndrome]. 51 58

The mitral valve prolapse syndrome (MVPS) is an infrequent outcome of mitral valve prolapse, a common and usually benign structural abnormality. Psychiatric patients often present with symptoms indistinguishable from MVPS, knowledge of which is thus essential for differential diagnosis. Even when prolapse of the mitral valve is detected, the symptoms may be variously determined by both physical and emotional factors. Four illustrative case histories are presented.
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PMID:Psychiatric implications of the mitral valve prolapse syndrome (MVPS). 51 42

To examine problems in echocardiographic diagnosis of mitral valve prolapse, multiple crystal cross-sectional echocardiography and single crystal recordings derived from the multiple crystal array were used to study 45 clinically normal children aged 3 to 15 years (Group A), 26 children aged 2 to 10 years with known mitral valve prolapse (Group B), 12 children with a catheterization-proved large left to right shunt at the ventricular level (Group C) and 8 children with catheterization-proved left ventricular outflow tract obstruction (Group D). Children in Groups A and B were not studied hemodynamically. Children in Groups C and D had no evidence of mitral valve prolapse on angiography and were studied echocardiographically to determine the effect of changes in ventricular shape on the patterns of mitral valve motion. In the real time cross-sectional studies, normal patients demonstrated a spectrum of mitral valve motion in which the bodies of the anterior and posterior leaflets became slightly horizontal with systolic ejection. The mitral apparatus assumed a curvilinear funnel shape. Arching of the leaflets into a horizontal configuration was more striking in the presence of either left ventricular dilatation in left to right shunt or involvement of the anterior mitral anulus in subaortic stenosis (two patients) and was associated with false positive M mode tracings suggesting mitral valve prolapse. This latter configuration was easily differentiated from the superior motion of the body of the leaflets in true prolapse. Studies of single crystal M mode recordings derived form the cross-sectional array in known locations from six normal patients revealed M mode patterns of pseudoprolapse in tracings derived from the leaflet body and patterns of normal motion at the free edge. In contrast, superior-posterior prolapse visualized in cross-sectional studies in patients with the click-murmur syndrome was associated with abnormal M mode recordings from all parts of the leaflet, including the free edge, although the abnormalities were most striking in tracings derived from the leaflet body. The M mode echocardiographic findings of mitral valve prolapse in both normal patients and patients with the click-murmur syndrome were dependent upon transducer angulation and the portion of the valve examined. The critical differentiation of the spectrum of normal valve motion from prolapse requires careful evaluation of echoes from the free edge of the leaflet where the posterior and anterior leaflet echoes coapt in early systole.
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PMID:Echocardiographic spectrum of mitral valve motion in children with and without mitral valve prolapse: the nature of false positive diagnosis. 55 83

Clinical and echo-phonomechanocardiographic reports. The results concerning 7 subjects with mitral valve prolapse (M.V.P.), all members of the same familiar group, are reported. The anamnestic investigation for cardio-vascular deseases, Marfan's syndrome or other abnormalities referred to mesenchimopathies has been negative. No subject with M.V.P. has referred subjective cardio-vascular symptoms nor radiological, ecgraphic and echo-phonomechanocardiographic signs of reduced cardiac function, have been pointed out. The phonomechanocardiographic tracings have shown a variable and low-amplitude click. The echocardiographic tracings have shown a U-shaped (3 cases) and double U-shaped (1 case) pansystolic, early systolic (2 cases) and of doubtful classification (1 case) prolapse. The hypothesis of an autosomal dominant form of inheritance of the desease with not yet clear mechanism of genetic transmission is confirmed. Furthermore, environmental and genetic factors that interfere with the orderly valvular formation at a certain stage of the fetal development, are referred. The Authors remark the necessity of further investigations, among more familiar groups, for identifying the genetic-environmental factors, that, eventually, could have any implication in the ethiopathogenetic mechanism of the disease. The report of "silent" forms and the not yet completely known evolution of the M.V.P. don't justify its not-recognition.
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PMID:[Mitral valve prolapse in a family group. Clinico-instrumental findings]. 59 36

Real-time, phased-array, two-dimensional echocardiographic studies identified ruptured chordae tendineae in five patients: four patients had a flail mitral valve and one had flail mitral and tricuspid valves. The characteristic abnormality was a rapid systolic motion of the involved leaflet beyond the line of valve closure into the atrium. The maximal abnormal systolic motion was greatest at the tip of the leaflet with a loss of the normal coaptation point. By contrast, the two-dimensional echocardiographic feature of mitral valve prolapse is an abnormal systolic motion that is maximal in the body of the leaflet with intact leaflet coaptation. Thus, two-dimensional echocardiography can identify flail mitral and tricuspid valves and is useful in distinguishing ruptured chorade from valvular prolapse.
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PMID:Two-dimensional echocardiographic recognition of ruptured chordae tendineae. 61 11

Fourteen patients with mitral valve prolapse and essentially normal coronary arteries were evaluated for ventricular arrhythmias, utilizing programmed ventricular extrastimulation. Three were symptomatic with ventricular tachyarrhythmias. Application of appropriately timed ventricular extrasystoles initiated the tachyarrhythmias in these three patients. The remaining eleven mitral prolapse patients were apparently free of tachycardias. Repetitive ectopic beats were not induced by extrastimulation in these eleven patients. The initiation of ventricular tachyarrhythmias by extrastimulation suggests a reentrant mechanism for the ventricular ectopy of mitral valve prolapse.
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PMID:Ventricular extrastimulation in the mitral valve prolapse syndrome. Evidence for ventricular reentry. 66 16


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