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

Echocardiographic and phonocardiographic findings in 35 patients with Marfan's Syndrome and ten patients without Marfan's or other clinically apparent connective tissue disorders but with angiographic and echocardiographic evidence of mitral prolapse are reported and compared. Echocardiography revealed aortic root dilatation and/or mitral valve prolapse in 97% of the patients with Marfan's Syndrome. Aortic root dilatation was found in 60% of this group (74% of males, 33% of females) while mitral valve prolapse was found in 91% (87% of males, 100% of females). The incidence of aortic dilatation and mitral prolapse in patients with Marfan's syndrome was essentially equal in children and adults of the same sex. None of the nine adults or one child with mitral prolapse but without evidence of Marfan's Syndrome or other clinically apparent connective tissue disorder had aortic root enlargement. Ausculatory examination and phnocardiography revealed abnormalities in 54% of the patients with Marfan's Syndrome. Aortic regurgitation was found in 23% of this group (35% of males, 0% of females) while mitral regurgitation and/or mitral clicks were found in 46% (39% of males, 58% of females). Aortic regurgitation was much more frequent in adult males with Marfan's Syndrome (7/14, 50%) than male children (1/9, 11%), while the incidence of abnormal mitral sounds was essentially the same in adults (33% of males, 60% of females) and children (43% of males, 57% of females) of the same sex with Marfan's Syndrome. Abnormal mitral sounds were more frequent in patients without Marfan's who had mitral prolapse (90%) than in those with Marfan's (46%). It appears that cardiac abnormalities are a consistent manifestation of Marfan's Syndrome and that ultrasound is a more sensitive indicator of these abnormalities in such patients than ausculation or phonocardiography.
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PMID:Aortic root dilatation and mitral valve prolapse in Marfan's syndrome: an ECHOCARDIOgraphic study. 115 78

Right ventriculography was used to assess the tricuspid valve in 61 patients with systolic murmur-click syndrome. Systolic murmurs were present in 47 cases, and 32 had clicks. Mitral valve prolapse was present in 52 patients. Late systolic prolapse of the tricuspid valve was demonstrated in 32 patients (52.4%). In 9 cases, prolapse involved the tricuspid valve alone. In the systolic murmur-click syndrome, prolapse may involve either or both of the atrioventricular valves.
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PMID:Prolapse of the tricuspid leaflets in the systolic murmer-click syndrome. 122 11

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

Ten per cent of all patients referred to the echocardiography laboratory for diagnostic evaluation had mitral valve prolapse. Of these 35 patients, 19 (54 per cent) had prolapse of both the anterior and posterior mitral leaflets. Of the 19 patients, 13 had Type A or midsystolic prolapse, whereas six had Type B or pansystolic prolapse of the mitral leaflets. Simultaneous phonocardiographic examination of the patients revealed either midsystolic click and late systolic murmur, pansystolic murmur, or isolated click and short systolic murmur. There was no apparent correlation between the echocardiographic prolapse pattern and the auscultatory events. One patient with Type A prolapse had no auscultatory abnormalities at the time of the examination. It is suggested that the abnormal sounds may be generated by a redundant mitral leaflet rather than chordae tendineae.
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PMID:Double mitral leaflet prolapse: echocardiographic-phonocardiographic correlation. 124 25

Clinical, electrocardiographic, phonocardiographic, and echocardiographic examinations were performed in 100 presumably healthy young females. Treadmill testing and ambulatory electrocardiographic monitoring were performed in a selected group of these subjects. Phonocardiograms, recorded with the subjects supine at rest, after inhalation of amyl nitrite, and in the upright position, revealed a 17% incidence of nonejection clicks and/or late or mid- to late systolic murmurs (PHONO-MSCLSM). Echocardiographic studies were performed in the second, third, fourth, and fifth intercostal space with emphasis on the importance of transducer angulation on the chest. Studies obtained with the transducer perpendicular to the chest in the sagittal plane, or pointing cephalad at a time when both mitral leaflets and left atrium are recorded, are optimal to study the mitral valve systolic motion. With the transducer in this position, 21 subjects were found to have pansystolic or late systolic prolapse, as previously defined on the echocardiogram. The presence of these echocardiographic findings was statistically related to the presence of PHONO-MSCLSM. Other echocardiographic patterns were identified and their relation to PHONO-MSCLSM and transducer position is discussed. Ten subjects with both echocardiographic evidence of mitral valve prolapse and PHONO-MSCLSM were identified (group EP), while 18 other subjects had either echocardiographic or phonocardiographic findings suggestive of mitral valve abnormality (group EorP). Seventy-two subjects had no abnormality (group noEP). The incidence of various clinical, electrocardiographic, and echocardiographic findings in these three groups was determined. Some findings said to be common in patients with proven mitral valve prolapse were seen more frequently in group EP subjects. Echocardiographic and phonocardiographic findings suggesting mitral valve abnormalities were found more commonly than expected in a population of presumably healthy young females.
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PMID:Mitral valve prolapse in one hundred presumably healthy young females. 124 78

The clinical, roentgenographic, phonocardiographic, ECG, and echocardiographic data were evaluated in 40 consecutive middle-aged and elderly male patients with echocardiographically detectable systolic prolapse of mitral valve leaflets. Prolapse was present during more than half of systole in 31 patients and was holosystolic in six patients. In most instances, both leaflets prolapsed during systole. The closing velocity and excursion of the anterior leaflet were frequently increased particularly in association with evidence of mitral insufficiency. A majority of the patients had cardiac symptomatology. Moreover, roentgenographic and/or ECG evidence of cardiac enlargement or hypertrophy was evident in 45 percent of patients with mitral valve prolapse.
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PMID:The significance of mitral valve prolapse in middle-aged and elderly men. 125 26

This study evaluates the effect of propranolol on the echocardiogram of 8 patients with late systolic mitral value prolapse. Echocardiograms were performed with the patients on no medication and again while on oral propranolol therapy. Propranolol caused a statistically significant increase in left ventricular volume; however, neither the echocardiographic pattern nor the timing of mitral valve prolapse was altered by propranolol. These findings suggest that factors in addition to left ventricular volume play a role in regulating valvular dysfunction in this condition.
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PMID:Echocardiographic evaluation of propranolol therapy for mitral valve prolapse. 125 27

The onset of mitral valve prolapse and its close correlate, the time of systolic click, vary considerably with different physiologic and pharmacologic interventions. In order to explain the mechanism responsible for these alterations, the effects of tilt and amyl nitrite inhalation on left ventricular dynamics and the time of the systolic click were studied by analyzing echocardiograms and simultaneously recorded phonocardiograms in 14 patients with mitral valve prolapse and mid-systolic click. The patients were studied in the supine position, with 40-60 degrees head-up tilt and after amyl nitrite inhalation. Computer analysis of the recordings was used to measure the left ventricular end-diastolic diameter, the click diameter (left ventricular diameter at the time of mid-systolic click), the maximal velocity of circumferential fiber shortening (max VCF), and the time interval between the first heart sound and systolic click (S1-X). With tilt and amyl nitrite, shortening of the S1-X interval b y an average of 44 and 87 msec, respectively, was observed. The click diameter, however, remained virtually constant with both maneuvers. Earlier prolapse after tilt was due to a decrease in the end-diastolic diameter from 5.03 +/- 0.74 to 4.50 +/- 0.68 cm (P less than 0.001) with no change in max VCF. Immediately after amyl nitrite, earlier prolapse was due to an increase of VCF in the preprolapse period, with max VCF increasing from 2.15 +/- 0.27 to 3.06 +/- 0.40 circ/sec (P less than 0.001), there being no change in the end-diastolic diameter up to this time. The constant click diameter indicates that the abnormal valve motion in this syndrome occurs at a critical left ventricular chamber size. Variations in the onset of prolapse are caused by changes in left ventricular end-diastolic dimensions and the velocity of circumferential fiber shortening in the preprolapse period.
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PMID:The determinants of onset of mitral valve prolapse in the systolic click-late systolic murmur syndrome. 126 Sep 92

The prevalence of mitral valve prolapse (MVP) appears to be age related, MVP being commoner in children as compared to adults. This suggests that asymptomatic MVP may be most frequent in children who are very young. In this study, to better define the prevalence of MVP in young children, we used two dimensional echocardiography and prospectively surveyed 213 healthy urban school children between 3 and 12 years of age. MVP was diagnosed when prolapse of mitral leaflet/s was demonstrated by both two-dimensional and M-mode echocardiography at parasternal long-axis views. Overall, MVP was found in 28 of 213 (13.1%) children. MVP was similarly prevalent in all age groups studied (3-5.9 years: 13 of 83 (13.5%); 6-8.9 years: 9 of 71 (11.2%); and 9-12 years: 6 of 31 (16.2%) children; Chi square = 0.57, p greater than 0.5). Univariate analysis showed that the prevalence of MVP was independent of sex, birth weight, resting heart rate and systolic or diastolic blood pressure. A mid systolic murmur was present in 50.6% of the children although it correlated with echocardiographic diagnosis of MVP in only 39.3%. The left ventricular size or wall thickness and mitral EF and DE slopes were similar in children either with or without MVP. Our results indicate that asymptomatic MVP is frequent in children upto 12 years of age. As a diagnostic test of MVP, presence of apical systolic murmur is considerably inferior to echocardiography. No morphological left ventricular correlates were identified in MVP.
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PMID:Mitral valve prolapse: two dimensional echocardiography reveals a high prevalence in three to twelve year old children. 145 21

The authors present the case of mitral valve prolapse. In a young woman with three-year history of systematically treated epilepsia mitral valve prolapse with a spurious string within left ventricle has been diagnosed echocardiographically in coincidence with the symptoms of haemorrhagic diathesis of von Willebrand type in form of haemoptysis and or/massive haemorrhages in mouth occasionally being preceded by heart rhythm disturbances. No local changes have been observed in otorhinolaryngologic examination, bronchoscopy and gastroscopy. Possible mutual dependence of 3 above stated abnormalities is being discussed. It is not excluded, that mitral prolapse may constitute the primary entity and epilepsia is of secondary character as a result of cerebral ischaemic incidents or of cerebral embolism. It is also a matter of discussion to what extent abrupt haemodynamic disturbances connected with critical fall of systemic blood pressure due to mitral prolapse may influence the haemorrhagic episodes.
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PMID:[Coexistence of von Willebrand's disease with mitral valve prolapse]. 130 May 78


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