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

From 1974 to 1983, 37 symptomatic patients with mitral systolic click (Barlow's syndrome) underwent mitral valve repair. In 11 patients (30%), the click syndrome was associated with minor mitral regurgitation. Thirty-two patients (86%) had chest pain, 20 had arrhythmia (54%), and 20 had dyspnea as a major complaint. In 5 patients, the arrhythmia was serious, and in 2 of them, it was potentially life threatening. Mitral annuloplasty using a collar prosthesis was performed in 33 patients with posterior leaflet plication in 2, shortening of the chordae in 1, and commissural plication in 2. In 4 patients, commissural plication was performed. One of these patients also required cusp plication and shortening of the chordae, and another required repair of ruptured chordae. There were no operative or late cardiac-related deaths at a mean follow-up of 4.7 years (range, 1 to 10 years). Sixty-two percent of patients with prolapse alone and 91% of those with associated regurgitation were improved by at least one New York Heart Association Functional Class, with 60% of patients obtaining relief of one or more symptoms. In the presence of major symptoms, mitral annuloplasty offers symptomatic relief for some patients with mitral systolic click syndrome without valve incompetence, but it gives substantially better results in patients with mitral regurgitation.
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PMID:Surgical treatment of mitral systolic click syndrome: results in 37 patients. 397 Jun 9

34 patients with catheter verified, haemodynamically trivial mitral leaflet prolapse with chest pain and normal coronary arteries were studied. Nineteen had no auscultatory signs of MLP despite clear catheter or echocardiographic evidence of prolapse. Infero-lateral repolarisation changes on the resting electrocardiogram were present in 29%. 50% had false positive exercise tests. M-mode echocardiography proved diagnostically disappointing but sector scans revealed mitral leaflet prolapse in 62%. The apical 4 chamber acoustic window was markedly superior to the parasternal long axis acoustic window.
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PMID:Electrocardiography and echocardiography in patients with chest pain and mitral leaflet prolapse. 404 7

The effects of oral digoxin on symptoms, arrhythmias, exercise tolerance and echocardiographic function in primary mitral leaflet prolapse were studied in 23 patients using a double-blind crossover protocol. Digoxin reduced the incidence and severity of chest pain compared with both the control (P = 0.0002) and placebo (P = 0.0005) periods. We found a high (83%) incidence of predominantly minor arrhythmias on continuous ambulatory monitoring. Digoxin favourably affected the incidence of frequent supraventricular ectopic beats and supraventricular tachycardia but was associated with a significant number (P less than 0.0025) of asymptomatic bradyarrhythmias. In patients with frequent ventricular ectopics, digoxin had no consistent effect. No difference in exercise tolerance between treatment periods was found on maximal treadmill stress testing, but digoxin administration resulted in an increase in echocardiographic mean circumferential fibre shortening velocity (P less than 0.01) and fractional shortening percent (P less than 0.01). This study demonstrates the efficacy of oral digoxin therapy in ameliorating chest pain in patients with primary mitral leaflet prolapse and suggests a favourable effect on supraventricular arrhythmias in such patients.
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PMID:The effects of oral digoxin therapy in primary mitral leaflet prolapse. 636 77

In six patients with clinically unsuspected right atrial thromboemboli the diagnosis was made with two-dimensional echocardiography. Five patients had pulmonary emboli, and one had systemic embolization. Three patients had congestive cardiomyopathy, two with tricuspid regurgitation; of the remaining three, one had cor pulmonale complicated by tricuspid regurgitation, one had thrombophlebitis and one had no discernible cardiac illness. Four patients had dizziness or syncope, four had dyspnea, three had chest pain, three had hypotension and tow had cyanosis. Five patients were treated with thrombolytic or anticoagulant therapy, or a combination of the two. In three patients, surgical removal of the thrombus was undertaken because of recurrent pulmonary emboli or tricuspid regurgitation, or both, and progressive right heart failure. The thromboemboli were removed in all three, but one patient died. On two-dimensional echocardiography, four of the six patients' thromboemboli were snake-like, unattached to the right atrium and prolapsed freely across the tricuspid valve into the right ventricle in diastole and back into the right atrium in systole. The other two patients' thromboemboli were attached to the right atrium and did not prolapse across the tricuspid valve. Our cases, together with a review of other reports, suggest that right atrial thromboemboli: 1) can be accurately diagnosed by two-dimensional echocardiography; and 2) result from two different pathophysiologic mechanisms developing a) in situ, either on a foreign body or secondary to reduced cardiac output, or b) as a result of an embolus from systemic vein thromboses.
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PMID:Right atrial thromboemboli: clinical, echocardiographic and pathophysiologic manifestations. 649 Oct 71

We examined 39 patients with biopsy proven sarcoidosis of the lungs by one-dimensional, two-dimensional and pulsed Doppler echocardiography. In 18 (46.2%) we revealed a prolapse of one or both cusps of the mitral valve which can partly explain some of the complaints and objective findings in these patients (palpitations, chest pain, changes on ECG resembling myocardial infarctions, murmurs, etc.). A minor pericardial effusion was present in 8 (20.5%) of the patients. The finding of reduced systolic thickening and excursions of the interventricular septum in 4 (10.2%) may be related to the frequent prevalence of sarcoid granulomas in the septum. Asymmetric septal hypertrophy, recorded in 4 (10.2%) patients, may have had a similar origin. Administration of corticosteroids did not influence in a significant way any of the echocardiographic indicators nor the amount of pericardial effusion. In patients with palpitations and extrasystolic arrhythmias, however, the extrasystoles disappeared and the patients reported subjective relief in all instances.
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PMID:Echocardiography in sarcoidosis. 650 35

One hundred and five cases with idiopathic mitral valve prolapse (MVP) diagnosed by two-dimensional (2-D) echocardiography were classified into 5 groups according to the grade of prolapse (Fig. 1), 47 cases of which were followed prospectively for average 2.9 years. 1) Most of the cases with MVP of grade 3 or less showed normal left ventricular diastolic dimension (LVDd) and left atrial dimension (LAD) throughout the follow-up period, while the majority of the cases with MVP of grade 4 revealed increased LVDd and LAD. Thus the mitral regurgitation due to MVP seemed to be insignificant in cases of grade 3 or less, while it is significant in cases of grade 4. 2) During the follow-up period cases of grade 1, 2 and 3 showed the transition of the grade of prolapse each other. On the other hand, most of the cases of grade 4 at the initial examination did not show the change in its grade of prolapse. 3) Fifty-eight cases (55.2%) had symptoms such as chest pain, palpitation and dizziness, and various electrocardiographic abnormalities such as ST and T wave changes, prolongation of QT interval and arrhythmias were also frequently observed. However, the incidence of these symptoms and signs was independent from the grade of MVP. It was concluded that MVP with grade 4 or more is hemodynamically significant, while it was insignificant in cases of grade 3 or less. Therefore, those with symptoms and/or electrocardiographic abnormalities in cases with MVP of grade 3 or less will not require any treatment but only a follow-up observation.
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PMID:[Diagnosis of idiopathic mitral valve prolapse by two-dimensional echocardiography: evaluation of its clinical significance in the prospective follow-up study]. 718 85

Mitral valve prolapse, although usually a benign condition, can cause incapacitating chest pain or refractory arrhythmias. Among patients undergoing cardiac catheterization for evaluation of chest pain, 50 who were found to have mitral valve prolapse were analyzed. Three patients had neither a click nor a murmur. Echocardiography was diagnostic in 46 patients; two patients had no evidence of prolapse, and two patients had tests that were technically inadequate. Only 15 of the patients demonstrated a normal electrocardiogram.
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PMID:Mitral valve systolic click syndrome. 737 71

Our purpose was to determine the incidence of mitral valve prolapse in patients with anxiety neurosis or panic disorder, with symptoms including recurrent anxiety attacks, dyspnea, palpitations, chest pain, dizziness, and paresthesias. Twenty-one patients and 20 age- and sex-matched normal controls were studied. Objective cardiac abnormalities were significantly (p < 0.05) more frequent in the patient group as compared to the control group; these comprised echocardiographic prolapse, ST-T abnormalities on resting ECG, premature ventricular contractions on exercise ECG, and the combination of echo prolapse with clicks/murmurs of exercise-induced PVC. We conclude that patients with anxiety neurosis or panic disorder may also have evidence of an organic abnormality--the mitral prolapse syndrome.
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PMID:Mitral valve prolapse in anxiety neurosis (panic disorder). 740

Within one and a half year 24 patients with arrhythmias or chest pain were investigated to detect a mitral valve prolapse syndrome which was found in 9 cases by echocardiography. Within this group 6 patients complained of fatigue, dizziness, dyspnea or syncope, 6 had chest pain, 7 paroxysmal tachycardia and 2 patients premature beats. Auscultation revealed in 3 cases a systolic click, in 1 case a systolic click with late systolic murmur and in 5 cases a systolic murmur only. The ECG showed premature ventricular contractions in 2 patients, ST-T abnormalities in 6 patients. Echocardiography showed a late systolic prolapse in 6 and a pansystolic prolapse in 3 patients. In 3 cases also an angiography was performed and in this way a mitral valve prolapse detected; hemodynamics and coronary arteries were normal in all 3 cases but in one case a mitral insufficiency and in one case an asynergy of the anterior wall was found. Pathophysiology, clinical symptoms and phonocardiographic, echocardiographic and angiographic findings in mitral valve prolapse syndrome are discussed.
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PMID:[Mitral valve prolapse syndrome]. 744 4

Abnormalities of left ventricular contraction in patients with mitral valve prolapse have suggested a myocardial factor in this disease. To determine systolic left ventricular function in mitral valve prolapse, technetium-99m gated equilibrium radionuclide cineangiography was performed in 47 patients with this diagnosis. In 39 patients without mitral regurgitation the average ejection fraction was normal at rest (average [+/- standard error of the mean] 57 +/- 3 percent, normal 57 +/- 1 percent, difference not significant) and exceeded the lower limits of normal in all but 1 patient, whose ejection fraction was 41 percent. However, ejection fraction during maximal exercise was lower for the group of patients with mitral prolapse without mitral regurgitation than for normal subjects (average 64 +/- 2 percent, normal 71 +/- 2 percent, p < 0.005). In eight patients with mitral prolapse and mitral regurgitation, the average ejection fraction was normal at rest but was diminished with exercise in comparison with both normal subjects and patients with mitral valve prolapse without mitral regurgitation. Chest pain, arrhythmia and the pattern or extent of mitral valve prolapse on echocardiography were not independently associated with impaired left ventricular functional reserve. We conclude that, although many patients with mitral valve prolapse have normal left ventricular function, there is a subgroup without mitral regurgitation in whom diminished left ventricular functional reserve is suggestive of a cardiomyopathic process.
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PMID:Left ventricular function in mitral valve prolapse: assessment with radionuclide cineangiography. 745 11


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