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Query: UMLS:C0033377 (
prolapse
)
11,717
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Two hundred angio-cardiograms of patients with confirmed myodardial infarcts or angina pectoris were analysed. Patients with
rheumatic heart disease
were not included. In each patient the left ventricule and coronary vessels had been demonstrated and pressure measurements taken. In 8.5% there was
prolapse
of a mitral valve leaflet. In two thirds of these produced mitral insufficiency.
...
PMID:[Prolapse of the mitral valve in coronary heart disease (author's transl)]. 15 32
Thromboembolism (TE) occurs in about 20% of patients with rheumatic mitral valve disease, and platelet survival time in these patients has correlated with TE. In patients with mitral valve prolapse, TE appears to occur very infrequently. Platelet survival (autologous labeling with chromium-51) was performed in 26 patients with mitral
prolapse
. Five patients had a history of stroke, as well as normal cerebrovascular arteriography and shortened platelet survival (average half-time +/- SEM 2.3 +/- 0.18 days; normal half-time 3.7 +/- 0.03 days; n = 26; p less than 0.01). Platelet survival was shortened in seven of 21 patients without TE (33%) (3.3 +/- 0.06 days; p less than 0.01 vs patients with TE). In 138 patients with
rheumatic heart disease
, platelet survival was shortened in 40 of 41 (98%) with a history of TE (2.3 +/- 0.08 days) and in 76 of 97 (78%) without TE (2.9 +/- 0.07 days; p less than 0.001 vs patients with TE). In patients with mitral
prolapse
, sulfinpyrazone increased platelet survival (2.4 +/- 0.16 to 2.7 +/- 0.19 days; n = 7; p less than 0.05). Our results suggest that platelet survival time is shortened in patients with mitral
prolapse
and
rheumatic heart disease
who have had TE. Of those without TE there is an increased frequency of shortened platelet survival in patients with
rheumatic heart disease
(78%) compared with those with mitral
prolapse
(33%), consistent with the infrequency of TE in mitral
prolapse
.
...
PMID:Platelet survival time and thromboembolism in patients with mitral valve prolapse. 44 32
Heart disease is the most important nonobstetric cause of maternal death; however, most young women with heart disease do well during pregnancy. If the physician is uncertain of the effects of pregnancy on a particular heart condition, needless restrictions may be imposed. The main hazards are: pulmonary edema when it occurs suddenly in mitral stenosis; pulmonary hypertension (because pulmonary vascular disease tends to be exacerbated by pregnancy); infective endocarditis (this is rare); and fulminating peripartum cardiomyopathy. The practical management of the pregnant patient with various concomitant heart conditions (congenital heart disease, pulmonary hypertension,
rheumatic heart disease
, anticoagulants and artificial valves, constrictive pericarditis, kyphoscoliosis, Marfan's syndrome, mitral
prolapse
, hypertrophic cardiomyopathy, dilated cardiomyopathy, infective endocarditis, and arrhythmias) is discussed. An absolute indication for therapeutic abortion is severe pulmonary vascular disease; discretionary indications include 'chronic thromboembolic pulmonary hypertension,' cardiomyopathies (depending on the hemodynamic disturbance), and Marfan's syndrome.
...
PMID:Cardiovascular disease in pregnancy. 218 16
Echocardiographic observations in 200 subjects with mitral valve prolapse (MVP) are presented. The diagnostic criteria used were: (1) abrupt late systolic posterior motion of one or both leaflets of the mitral valve, and (2) holoor pansystolic posterior motion of 3 mm of one or both leaflets of the mitral valve. Most of the subjects were young--72% were aged less than 30 years.
Prolapse
of posterior leaflets was noted in 98% of subjects--69.5% late systolic, 28.5% pansystolic, and 2% had
prolapse
of the anterior mitral leaflet only. Mitral valve prolapse was considered to be primary--being the only abnormality in 78.5% of the subjects. In the remaining 21.5% MVP was associated with other cardiac lesions, the commonest being, atrial septal defect (2.5%), dilated aortic root (2%), bicuspid aortic valve (2%), cardiomyopathy (5%),
rheumatic heart disease
(4%) and ischaemic heart disease (1.5%). Mitral valve prolapse was considered to be important enough to result in haemodynamically significant mitral regurgitation in only 8% of subjects. Mitral valve prolapse was the commonest single echocardiographic abnormality (16%) observed in patients referred to this university hospital, which is the referral centre for approximately half of Libya. Although this does not indicate the prevalence of MVP in the general population, this study indicates MVP to be the commonest valvular abnormality seen in hospital practice in Libya.
...
PMID:Echocardiographic features of mitral valve prolapse in Libyan patients. 254 92
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.
...
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
Prolapse
of the mitral valve has superseded
rheumatic heart disease
in recent years as the most common cause of isolated mitral insufficiency in Europe and North America. This condition is recognized with increasing frequency, and its prevalence increases with age, apparently afflicting more than 5% of all persons older than 50 years of age. Consequently, mitral valve prolapse has acquired considerable medical and economic importance. Familial and nonfamilial forms are recognized. Nonfamilial forms can be further classified into cases that occur in statistically significant association with other diseases, and sporadic cases that include those possibly secondary to other conditions.
...
PMID:The syndrome of prolapse of the mitral valve: an etiologic and pathogenic enigma. 704 15
An association between rheumatic fever/
rheumatic heart disease
and mitral
prolapse
has been suggested. Since mitral stenosis in adults is a reliable indicator of
rheumatic heart disease
, we undertook this study to define the association between
rheumatic heart disease
and
prolapse
by estimating the frequency with which mitral stenosis and mitral
prolapse
coexist in the same patient. A second purpose was to assess the usefulness of two-dimensional and standard M-mode echocardiograms in making the diagnosis of mitral
prolapse
in the presence of mitral stenosis. Twenty patients with moderate to severe mitral stenosis were studied. Standard M-mode echocardiographic criteria for
prolapse
were used; in the two-dimensional echocardiograms, we searched for arching of the mitral leaflets cephaloposteriorly above the atrioventricular ring. Left ventricular angiograms were evaluated for
prolapse
both subjectively and objectively by using the posterior medial scallop length index criteria. We found that the majority of these mitral stenosis patients satisfied the M-mode criteria for
prolapse
, whereas movement of the mitral leaflets into the left atrium by two-dimensional echocardiography and angiography occurred in fewer patients. Three patients met all echocardiographic and angiographic criteria for
prolapse
, but none had clinical evidence of
prolapse
. We conclude that the coexistence of mitral
prolapse
and mitral stenosis, if it occurs at all, is uncommon. M-mode echocardiography alone is unreliable to diagnose
prolapse
when mitral stenosis is present, since the M-mode criteria for
prolapse
are met by the majority of mitral stenosis patients.
...
PMID:Does mitral prolapse occur in mitral stenosis? Echocardiographic-angiographic observations. 724 14
During the past 2.5 years, 50 Ross operations have been performed at Rigshospitalet in Copenhagen in a broad range of patients with aortic valve disease including children and adults from 6 weeks to 71 years of age. Many patients had complicating conditions including endocarditis (n = 13, eight native, five prosthetic valve), prosthetic valve dysfunction (n = 4), subvalvular obstruction (n = 3) treated by septal myectomy (n = 1) or modified Konno operation (n = 2), ascending aortic aneurysm (n = 2), ventricular septum defect (n = 1), mitral valve disease (n = 6),
rheumatic heart disease
(n = 4), coronary artery disease (n = 1), and extreme obesity (n = 1). All operations were performed as free-standing total aortic root replacements. The results have been encouraging with low mortality (2%) and no major morbidity. One patient has been reoperated because of autograft insufficiency due to left coronary cusp
prolapse
and two additional patients have grade 2 autograft insufficiency and are being followed closely. Two patients have developed early pulmonary homograft stenosis, which has required pulmonary homograft replacement. Despite these problems, we are enthusiastic about this operation and believe it may emerge as operation of choice for most patients under 60-65 years of age with aortic valve disease and for patients with prosthetic or advanced native aortic valve endocarditis. With increasing frequency, our choice has been to proceed with a Ross operation, and currently, our only absolute contraindication is Marfan's syndrome. Based on reported recurrent disease in patients with rheumatic valve disease, the autograft should be used with caution for this indication.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Expanding indications for the Ross operation. 758 41
Thirty-five patients with mitral valve prolapse were repaired at Fu Wai Hospital in Beijing between Jan. 1988 and June, 1993. 20 males and 15 females of them aged ranging from 7 to 52 years. 9 patients was less than 14 years old in this group. The mitral
prolapse
were caused by degeneration, congenital heart disease, trauma and
rheumatic heart disease
. The mitral anterior leaflet were eroded in 7 patients, posterior leaflet in 26 patients, both anterior and posterior leaflets in 2 patients. The dilation of the mitral annulus, rupture and prolongation of chordae and defect in the leaflets were found in these patients. The reconstruction of mitral valve were performed in all patients under cardiopulmonary bypass using the resection or plication of the
prolapse
parts of the leaflets or reduce the diameter of mitral annulus with a carpentier ring. The results were satisfactory without mortality in hospital or in following-up period. The indication and method of the operation were discussed.
...
PMID:[Surgical correction of mitral valve prolapse]. 804 93
The epidemiology of rheumatic fever and
rheumatic heart disease
in a rural community (total population 114,610) in northern India was studied by setting up a registry based on primary health care centres. Health workers and schoolteachers were trained to identify suspected patients in school and village surveys (121 villages). Medical specialists screened 5-15-year-olds (n = 31,200). The population was followed up for 3 years (from March 1988 to March 1991). All suspected and registered cases were investigated by serial echocardiography and Doppler ultrasonography at a tertiary care centre. A total of 102 cases were confirmed to have rheumatic fever/
rheumatic heart disease
(prevalence, 0.09%); 66 were aged 5-15 years (prevalence, 0.21%). A total of 48 patients (24 males, 24 females; mean age, 12.11 +/- 3.7 years) were diagnosed to have a possible first attack of rheumatic fever (incidence, 0.54 per 1000 per year). Arthritis was observed in 36 (75%) and carditis in 18 (37.5%) of cases.
Prolapse
of the anterior mitral leaflet into the left atrium occurred in 5 (22%) cases with carditis. Mitral regurgitation was observed in all 18 cases of carditis; over the period of observation it disappeared in three cases and progressed to mitral stenosis in a further three. A total of 22 patients (11 males, 11 females; mean age, 19.41 +/- 8.1 years) were registered as rheumatic fever recurrences, and 32 patients (18 females, 14 males; mean age, 22.1 +/- 10.1 years) had chronic
rheumatic heart disease
. Of those with recurrences, 9 (41%) had carditis and 11 (50%) had arthritis.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Epidemiology of rheumatic fever and rheumatic heart disease in a rural community in northern India. 844 39
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