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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
Left ventriculograms of 45 patients with
angina
and normal coronary arteriograms were digitised frame by frame in order to detect regional abnormalities of wall movement. Though left ventricular pressures, end-diastolic volume, and ejection fraction were normal in all, regional outward movement during early systole was present in 10 patients, and abnormal inward wall movement during isovolumic relaxation also in 10, involving the apex or inferior surface. Both were present together in 8 patients, and affected segments showed normal amplitude and peak velocity of movement during ejection. These disturbances of wall movement were associated with inferior T wave changes on the electrocardiogram, and mitral
prolapse
, particularly when the latter resulted from delayed movement of the valve during ejection. It is suggested that the onset of contraction is delayed in affected areas, but that it proceeds normally thereafter. The resulting persistence of tension into the period of relaxation of the remainder of the ventricle may interfere locally with coronary flow, particularly during tachycardia, thus causing manifestations of regional ischaemia.
...
PMID:Abnormal left ventricular wall movement in patients with chest pain and normal coronary arteriograms. Relation to inferior T wave changes and mitral prolapse. 46 5
A case of isolated ectasia of the entire right coronary artery and mitral valve prolapse is reported. The patient presented with acute inferior myocardial infarction and progressive
angina pectoris
. The diagnosis of ectasia of the right coronary artery and mitral
prolapse
was established angiographically. During a two-year follow-up period, the patient has continued to have
angina
and has suffered a second inferior myocardial infarction. Subsequent angiographic reevaluation has failed to show occlusive coronary lesions. It is suggested that distal thromboembolism due to changes in the character of blood flow in the dilated vessel has been responsible for the two episodes of myocardial infarction and persistent
angina pectoris
.
...
PMID:Mitral valve prolapse (MVP) and coronary artery ectasia. 66 23
Mitral leaflet prolapse syndrome has been associated with anginal chest pain, atypical chest pain, electrocardiographic abnormalities and positive stress electrocardiograms. These features overlap those of ischemic heart disease. Furthermore, coronary artery disease is frequently associated with mitral leaflet
prolapse
. This study evaluated the usefulness of stress myocardial scintigraphy in distinguishing these two disorders. Thirty-two patients with an angiographic diagnosis of mitral leaflet
prolapse
were studied. Of the 22 patients (8 men and 14 women, mean age 48 years) with a normal coronary arteriogram, 5 had "typical"
angina pectoris
, 6 had resting electrocardiographic abnormalities and 6 had a positive stress electrocardiogram; all 22 patients had a normal stress myocardial scintigram. Of the 10 patients (7 men and 3 women, mean age 55 years) with at least 70 percent stenosis of one coronary artery, 6 had "typical"
angina pectoris
, 1 had resting electrocardiographic abnormalities and 7 had a positive stress electrocardiogram. Nine of these 10 patients had one or more demonstrable perfusion defects on stress myocardial scintigrams. It is concluded that mitral leaflet
prolapse
syndrome is not associated with regional myocardial ischemia as demonstrated with stress scintigraphy, and that stress scintigraphy, a noninvasive technique, is useful in distinguishing the mitral
prolapse
syndrome from mitral
prolapse
associated with coronary artery disease.
...
PMID:Stress myocardial imaging in mitral leaflet prolapse syndrome. 70 87
Intending to find out which is the prevalence of mitral valvular
prolapse
in cases of ischemic cardiopathy with "normal" coronariography, a review was made of the coronary-ventriculographic studies at the I.N.C. archives, which showed as clinical diagnosis that of ischemic cardiopathy with "normal" coronaries. In the present studies we record 47 cases showing chest
angina
and/or electrocardiographic changes in rest or effort tests, compatible with myocardic ischemia and coronariography undoubtedly normal. We found 30 cases (63.8%) showing strong evidence of mitral
prolapse
in the left cineventriculography taken in right-front oblique position.
...
PMID:[Prolapse of the mitral valve]. 70 34
The response to electrocardiographically monitored submaximal exercise stress testing has been studied in 44 patients with mitral leaflet
prolapse
(MLP). With exercise, ventricular premature contractions occurred in 7, ventricular tachycardia in 1, and atrial fibrillation in 1. Exercise was terminated short of target heart rate in 18 patients, because of chest pain (5), fatigue (7), ventricular arrhythmia (4), dizziness (1) or ST segment depression (1). 23 patients developed postexercise ST segment abnormalities, of whom 5 had 'ischemic' patterns and arteriographically proven coronary artery disease (CAD); among the 18 others, the ST segments were depressed and minimally downsloping in 2, slowly ascending from depressed J point in 3, horizontal for greater than or equal to 80 msec with J depression of less than 1 mm in 12, and cupped in 1. The incidence of arrhythmias provoked by submaximal exercise stress testing in patients with MLP was lower than suggested in previous reports. In all 5 cases where MLP and CAD coexisted, the classical 'ischemic' electrocardiographic response to exercise was not obscured. Even in the absence of CAD, postexercise ST segment abnormalities were common with MLP (18/39 = 46%) and differed from the progressively resolving ST segment deviation characteristic of CAD with
angina
. Exercise testing can safely be recommended, subject to standard contraindications, in patients with MLP and yields useful information.
...
PMID:The electrocardiographic response to exercise in 44 patients with leaflet prolapse. 71 Apr 93
Echocardiography was performed in 25 consecutive patients with
angina pectoris
and angiographically demonstrable coronary artery disease. Left ventricular echograms detected late or pansystolic mitral valve bowing suggesting of mitral valve proplapse in 6/25 (24%). Left ventricular angiography showed
prolapse
of the posterior mitral leaflet in 15/25 (60%), including 5 detected by echocardiography. Significant triple vessel coronary disease was present in 11 of 15 patients with prolapsed mitralvalve. In each of the latter a greater than 90 per cent obstructive lesion was noted in at least one coronary artery: right coronary artery, 9 subjects (82%); left circumflex coronary artery, 5 patients (33%); and left anterior descending coronary artery, 4 patients (27%). Of 15 subjects with angiographic evidence of mitral valve prolapse, 13 had left ventricular asynergy-inferior or inferoposterior in 8 subjects (62%) and anterior or anteroapical in 5 subjects (38%). Eleven subjects had vectorcardiographic evidence of transmural myocardial infarction-inferior or inferoposterior in 9 (82%) and anteroseptal in 2 (18%). A single subject with mitral valve prolapse had mild mitral regurgitation. It is concluded that: (1) coexisting
prolapse
of the posterior mitral valve leaflet and coronary artery disease is usually associated with triple vessel obstructive lesions, (2) severe right coronary disease, inferior left ventricular wall asynergy, and inferior myocardial infarction are important angiographic and vectorcardiographic correlates, and (3) echocardiography will detect such mitral valve prolapse in only one-third of affected cases.
...
PMID:Mitral valve prolapse in patients with coronary artery disease. Echocardiographic-angiographic correlation. 83 37
Patients with a prolapsing mitral leaflet frequently have chest pain while their coronary arteriograms are normal. In this regard, these patients are similar to the group of patients with
angina
and normal coronary arteriograms. In the present study, clinical, electrocardiographic, cardiac hemodynamic, angiographic, and metabolic findings in 20 patients with a prolapsing mitral leaflet were compared to those of 16 patients with
angina
and normal coronary arteriograms. Except for the presence of mitral leaflet
prolapse
and systolic clicks, the findings were similar in both groups. We postulate that prolapsing mitral leaflet is probably related to two different mechanisms. In one the primary pathologic change is in the mitral valve (mainly myxomatous transformation), and the abnormalities of ventricular contraction are secondary to unloading of the heart because of a volume shift into the distended and enlarged mitral leaflets. In the other group, the primary pathologic change is in the myocardium, with secondary
prolapse
of the mitral valve. The myocardial abnormality itself is probably related to primary underlying myocardial disease or to arteriolar pathologic changes. The latter group has probably the same pathophysiologic abnormality as patients with
angina
and normal coronary arteriograms.
...
PMID:The relationship between prolapsing mitral leaflet syndrome and angina and normal coronary arteriograms. 100 Oct 46
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.
...
PMID:Mitral valve prolapse and coronary artery disease. Clinical, hemodynamic, and angiographic correlations. 114 6
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.
...
PMID:Clinical features and investigative findings in presence of mitral leaflet prolapse. Study of 85 consecutive patients. 125 39
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