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

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.
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PMID:The electrocardiographic response to exercise in 44 patients with leaflet prolapse. 71 Apr 93

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.
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PMID:Clinical features and investigative findings in presence of mitral leaflet prolapse. Study of 85 consecutive patients. 125 39

The results of many studies on the prevalence of mitral valve prolapse have been greatly influenced by the diagnostic methods and criteria adopted as well as by population selection. The method of choice today is 2d-echocardiography because of its ability to highlight both movement anomaly (i.e. functional prolapse) and any eventual morphological variations of the mitral valve (i.e. anatomic prolapse). The latter (chordae lengthening, thickening and overabundance of the leaflets, dilation of the valvular ring) are, nowadays, considered especially important even as predictive factors of complications. Therefore we studied the prevalence of these two types of prolapse in a population of 420 university students. Functional mitral valve prolapse was found in 27/420 (6.4%) and anatomical prolapse in 2 cases (0.5%). No auscultatory finding was present in 24/27 patients with functional prolapse. There was no correlation between the two types of mitral valve prolapse and the body mass index, the fractional shortening of the left ventricle and symptoms (dyspnea, palpitations, precordial pain, dizziness). We think that the distinction between the two types of mitral valve prolapse should prove very useful for the comparison of results in future epidemiological studies. Follow-up of both groups of patients will hopefully clarify the usefulness of such distinction from the clinical point of view.
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PMID:[Mitral valve prolapse. A prevalence study using bidimensional echocardiography in a young population]. 232 71

Sublingual lorazepam (2 to 3 mg) was compared with intramuscular diazepam (0.25 mg/kg) and placebo for sedation during oral surgery under local anesthesia. Sixty patients were randomly allocated into three groups in this double-blind, parallel study. The results from this trial show that sublingually administered lorazepam provided good sedation and anxiolysis. More side-effects, such as giddiness, dizziness, and ptosis, as well as profound and prolonged psychomotor impairment, were, however, found in the lorazepam group than in those patients who had received intramuscular diazepam (0.25 mg/kg) or placebo.
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PMID:Comparison of sublingual lorazepam with intramuscular diazepam as sedatives during oral surgery. 316 62

To elucidate the clinical features of mitral valve prolapse in apparently healthy young population, two-dimensional echocardiography was performed in the students (18-22 years) without documented organic heart diseases. Focusing on the systolic dislocation and configuration of the anterior mitral leaflet, a following two-dimensional echocardiographic criterion for grading prolapse was used: Grade I: subjects only with slight slip of the tip of the anterior mitral leaflet (AML) toward the left atrium, Grade II: those with considerable slip of the AML but keeping a normal convex shape in the leaflet body toward the left atrium, and Grade III: those with severe slip of the AML with its ballooning toward the left atrium. Among 2016 students examined, 1507 subjects (74.8%) were judged to be normal, 343 (17.0%) to be Grade I, 141 (7.0%) to be Grade II, and 25 (1.2%) to be Grade III. Of the 25 subjects in Grade III, 20 subjects underwent further examination including a questionnaire about the subjective complaints, physical examination, electrocardiograms at rest and during exercise, Doppler echocardiography and postural tests. Concerning the subjective symptoms, eight subjects had some complaints including chest pain, shortness of breath, dizziness, palpitation, fatigability and synocope, and four of the eight had more than three complaints. Mid-systolic click and a late systolic murmur were audible in four and funnel chest was observed in one. No specific findings were found by electrocardiograms. Mild mitral and tricuspid regurgitations were observed by Doppler echocardiography in four and nine subjects, respectively.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:[Mitral valve prolapse: two-dimensional echocardiographic screening in apparently healthy students]. 326 87

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

I studied the prevalence and symptoms of idiopathic mitral valve prolapse by auscultation in 972 consecutive patients in an adult general medical population. Forty-five patients (4.6%) had idiopathic mitral valve prolapse defined by a nonejection click with or without a late systolic murmur. The prevalence was not significantly different in men and women. The mean age (49.9 yr) and age distribution of patients with prolapse were similar to those of patients without prolapse (47.7 yr). The prevalence of dizziness (4.1% vs. 1.5%), fatigue (4.4% vs. 2.6%), and palpitations (4.4% vs. 1.3%), was not significantly greater in patients with or without prolapse. Atypical chest pain (13% vs. 4.3%) and chronic anxiety (8.8% vs. 2.9%) were more frequent (less than 0.05) in the patients with prolapse than in those without prolapse. Of the patients with prolapse, 29 were healthy without clinically identifiable diseases while 16 had medical diseases. In the group without prolapse, 184 patients were healthy and 707 had other diseases. When patients with isolated prolapse without other associated diseases were compared to healthy patients without prolapse, the prevalence of atypical chest pain (17.4% vs. 17.2%) and chronic anxiety (7.1% vs. 10.3%) were not significantly different. When patients with prolapse and other diseases were compared to patients without prolapse and other diseases, the prevalence of atypical chest pain (6.2% vs. 1.1%) and chronic anxiety (6.2% vs. 1.7%) was again not significantly different. Thirty-two patients without prolapse were suspected but not confirmed of having disease and were not included in this analysis. The results would have been unaltered by their inclusion in the diseased group without prolapse.
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PMID:Does mitral valve prolapse cause nonspecific symptoms? 711 10

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

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


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