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

Two cases with prolapse of all four cardiac valves are described and compared with two similar ones previously reported. The severity and progression of regurgitation of each of the valves differed by case, despite having similar echocardiographic findings consistent with the diagnosis of multiple floppy valves. Two of the four patients had their aortic valve replaced because of severe regurgitation: the excised valves revealed myxomatous degeneration. None of the patients had any stigmata of Marfan or Ehlers-Danlos syndrome, except for the presence of hyperextensive joints. There may be an unknown collagen disorder that caused floppiness in all the valves.
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PMID:Multiple floppy valves with all cardiac valves prolapsing: clinical course and treatment. 186 29

Expanded polytetrafluoroethylene sutures have been used for replacement of diseased chordae tendineae during reconstructive procedures on the mitral valve in 43 patients. There were 28 men and 15 women whose mean age was 55 years, range 21 to 76. Three fourths of the patients were in New York Heart Association class III or IV. Replacement of primary chordae tendineae of the anterior leaflet was performed with 4-0 or 5-0 polytetrafluoroethylene sutures. A double-armed suture was passed twice through the fibrous portion of the papillary muscle head and tied down. Each arm of the suture was brought up to the free margin of the leaflet and passed through the area where the native chorda was attached. After the lengths of the two arms were adjusted, the ends were tied together on the ventricular side of the leaflet. Thirty patients had degenerative disease of the mitral valve; the incompetence was due to prolapse of the anterior leaflet in 14 patients and prolapse of the anterior and posterior leaflets in 16. Eleven patients had rheumatic mitral valve disease: four had stenosis, three had regurgitation, and four had mixed lesions. Two patients had ischemic mitral regurgitation caused by rupture of a papillary muscle head. There were no operative deaths. Patients have been followed up from 5 to 61 months, mean 13. Doppler echocardiographic studies were performed at regular intervals after the operation and revealed normal mitral valve function in most patients There were two failures that necessitated mitral valve replacement: one because of acute mitral regurgitation and the other because of hemolysis. There have been two late deaths, neither one valve related. Replacement of chordae tendineae with polytetrafluoroethylene sutures is simple and allows for reconstruction of the mitral valve in many patients who would otherwise require mitral valve replacement. Because our patients have been followed up for a limited time, the long-term results of this procedure remain unknown.
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PMID:Mitral valve repair by replacement of chordae tendineae with polytetrafluoroethylene sutures. 199 44

The aim of conservative management of mitral regurgitation caused by floppy mitral valve is to restore a valvular function which closely resembles that of normal physiology. Fifty-eight patients affected by floppy mitral valve underwent surgical procedures for severe mitral regurgitation due to chordal elongation and/or rupture. Of these, 28 presented posterior mitral prolapse corrected by quadrangular excision of the prolapsed part and posterior anuloplasty achieved by apposition of a polytetrafluoroethylene conduit. The remaining 30 patients presented anterior or bilateral prolapse corrected by transposition of chordae from the posterior leaflet to the anterior cusp together together with anuloplasty. A complete echo-Doppler study was performed preoperatively, 10 days after the operation and every 6 months thereafter. Mean follow-up was 16.1 +/- 6.3 months. Preoperatively, 44 patients presented severe mitral regurgitation and 14 had moderate regurgitation (quantified by means of pulsed Doppler). All patients showed severe enlargement of the left cavities (LVDD 67.1 +/- 8.6 mm, left atrium 53.4 +/- 10.9 mm) with normal mitral area (6.08 +/- 2.14 sqcm, Doppler measurement). Following surgery we found a significant reduction in: 1) the degree of mitral regurgitation (29 patients had no regurgitation; 20 had mild protosystolic mitral regurgitation (29 patients had no regurgitation; 20 had mild protosystolic mitral regurgition, confirmed by color-M-mode; moderate or severe regurgitation was found in 6 cases); 2) the left ventricle and left atrium dimensions (LVDD 53.4 +/- 5.2 mm, p less than 0.01; left atrium 43.8 +/- 11.1 mm, p less than 0.01). Color flow imaging provided information about the recovery of a normal valvular function.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:[Echo-Doppler study of myxomatous mitral valve insufficiency and the results of reparative surgery]. 207 85

To assess the value of intraoperative transesophageal echocardiographical Doppler color flow imaging (TEE-DCFI) during cardiac valvular surgery, 85 consecutive patients with 102 diseased valves for surgery were studied with pre-and post-operative TEE-DCFI. There were 34 women and 51 men with an age range of 15 to 55 years (mean age, 34.91 +/- 9.33 years). The etiology of valve lesion was rheumatic in 57 (AV 10, MV 47), prolapse in 9 (AV 2, MV 7), endocarditis in 21 (AV 12, MV 3, PV 2, prosthetic infection 4), prosthetic dysfunction in 14 (AV 5, MV 9), congenital in 1 (TV). Preoperative TEE-DCFI findings were helpful either in completing with some new information or changing the operation plan in 29 valves (28.43%) including abscess at aortic root in 1, perforation of aortic valve in 2, perforation of mitral valve leaflets in 5 patients with aortic valvular endocarditis, regurgitation or perivalvular leak of prosthetic valve in 4 MVs and 4AVs, left atrial thrombus detected in 8 and excluded in 3 patients with MV disease, small calcified vegetation on PV with normal valve function in 2 patients with congenital heart disease. Postoperative TEE-DCFI evaluation was performed in 53 patients with 70 diseased valves. There was only one mild regurgitation of mitral bioprosthesis and one mild perivalvular leak of aortic prosthesis detected among 40 replaced prosthetic valves. Of 30 valves repaired 23 (77%) valves had trivial or mild residual regurgitation (Group A) and 7 (23%) had moderate residual regurgitation (Group B). Postoperative congestive heart failure was seen in 6 (26.09%) of Group A and 5 (71.43%) of Group B (P less than 0.05).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:[The value of using transesophageal echocardiographic Doppler color flow imaging in patients undergoing cardiac valvular surgery]. 208 76

Cardiovascular anomalies have been studied in 13 subjects (8 males and 5 females, average age 15 +/- 7 years) affected from fragile X syndrome. This group has been examined by standard-ECG, Holter-ECG, echocardiography (M-mode, B-mode, Doppler and color-Doppler). The results have been compared with a control group of 39 subjects (20 males and 19 females, average age 15 +/- 5 years), with non genetic mental retardation. Clinical examination, ECG and Holter did not show any significant pathological alteration compared with the results of the control group. In the study group echocardiography showed the following results: 10 subjects (77%) had mitral valve prolapse of the anterior leaflet (arching); 4 of which (31%) with associated posterior leaflet prolapse; 2 subjects (15%) with posterior aortic leaflet prolapse; 2 subjects (15%) with tricuspid septal leaflet prolapse; 3 subjects (23%) had mild pulmonary artery dilatation; 1 subject (8%) had a mild aortic regurgitation; in 9 subjects (69%), 3 of whom with pulmonary artery dilatation, has been found pulmonary valve regurgitation; 10 subjects (77%) had tricuspid valve regurgitation. In all subjects cardiac dimensions were within the normal range. The most important result, in accordance with literature, is the high prevalence of mitral valve prolapse. The prolapse is asymptomatic and silent. We have never found aortic root dilatation that was described by other Authors. The described anomalies could be ascribed at the dysfunction of the connective tissue. This theory has been confirmed by necropsy studies. Therefore, we suppose that these alterations, particularly the anterior mitral leaflet prolapse, are non casually associated with the fragile X syndrome.
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PMID:[Cardiovascular aspects of Martin-Bell syndrome]. 209 33

A 17-year-old woman with mitral and tricuspid valve prolapse and myxomatous degeneration presented puerperal infection by Staphylococcus aureus with clinical picture of sepsis and multiple septic embolism (right eye, left thumb, spleen, and left calf). She underwent total hysterectomy on the 10th day postdelivery and right eye enucleation on the 16th. Temporary total AV block occurred on the 14th day with temporary external pacing during the next couple of days. Acute endocarditis with acute mitral regurgitation was diagnosed on the 13th day, demanding immediate valve replacement. On the 46th day she developed moderate tricuspid valve regurgitation due to another episode of endocarditis. Final clinical discharge took place on the 62nd day after antibiotic therapy completion.
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PMID:[Staphylococcus aureus endocarditis in a puerperal woman with mitral and tricuspid valve prolapse]. 209 20

The aim of this study was to confront preoperative echocardiographic data with the anatomic operative findings in patients with mitral insufficiency (MI) undergoing Carpentier's mitral valvuloplasty in order to determine the mechanism(s) of the regurgitation, to classify MI by the echocardiographic changes and to thereby answer the question as to whether echocardiography can identify the patients likely to benefit from this operation. Between February 1985 and November 1987, 66 patients (47 men, 19 women, average age 58 +/- 9 years) with pure MI were referred for surgery with a view to mitral valvuloplasty. This operation was possible in 49 patients (2 of 6 rheumatic MI and 47 of 60 dystrophic MI). The sensitivity of echocardiography was excellent and its specificity very good in diagnosing prolapse of one or the other mitral leaflets. Echocardiography was not as good in distinguishing rupture from elongation of the chordae tendinae and myxoid degeneration from fibro-elastic leaflets. Echocardiography allowed preoperative classification of MI in 4 groups: Group 1 (n = 46) with prolapse of the posterior leaflet; Group 2 (n = 4) with prolapse of the anterior leaflet; Group 3 (n = 8) with prolapse of both mitral leaflets; Group 4 (n = 2) with abnormalities of the mitral annulus alone. Carpentier's valvuloplasty was possible in 43/46 patients in Group 1, 2/4 patients in Group 2, 1/8 patients in Group 3 and 1/2 patients in Group 4. In conclusion, echocardiography is a good tool for selecting patients with dystrophic MI for Carpentier's valvuloplasty.
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PMID:[Echocardiography in selecting patients to undergo Carpentier's mitral valvuloplasty]. 210 5

This study clarified the clinical profile and echocardiographic findings of severe idiopathic tricuspid regurgitation (TR). Among 8,538 consecutive ultrasonic examinations, a total of 63 patients had severe TR, which was depicted by color flow mapping as a regurgitant signal more than 4 cm from the tricuspid valve orifice. Thirteen of the 63 patients had no underlying diseases, and these patients with severe idiopathic TR were the subjects of the present study. All 13 patients were over 66 years of age (mean 77.3 +/- 5.6 years old) and had had episodes of right heart failure which responded effectively to diuretics. All 13 patients had atrial fibrillation. Using two-dimensional echocardiography, thickening (77%), prolapse (69%) and malaligned coaptation (54%) of the tricuspid valves were observed. The tricuspid annular diameters, cross-sectional areas of the right and left atria and the right ventricular end-diastolic dimensions were significantly greater than those of the age-and-gender-matched lone atrial fibrillation group and the normal control group (p less than 0.01). The left ventricular dimension and ejection fraction did not differ from those of the matched lone atrial fibrillation group. Other valvular regurgitations were also detected (AR 77%, MR 100%, PR 69%), but the degrees of regurgitation were minimal. We proposed severe TR with tricuspid annular dilatation, right atrial and right ventricular dilatation observed in the aged as a distinct cardiac disease entity.
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PMID:[Clinical evaluation of severe idiopathic tricuspid regurgitation]. 213 28

Fulminating active rheumatic carditis has been observed for over three decades in this environment with no recent alteration in either the incidence or the pattern of presentation. Heart failure (in this context defined as 'an inadequate circulation at rest together with a raised pulmonary venous pressure, with or without an associated high systemic venous pressure in the absence of haemodynamically significant tricuspid valve disease or pericardial effusion') is prevalent but occurs only when a haemodynamically important left-sided valve lesion supervenes. Regurgitation is the predominant valve lesion and involves principally the mitral valve. Mitral annular dilatation is marked and predisposes to lengthening--or rupture--of chordae tendineae and prolapse of the anterior leaflet. The resultant cardiac work-overload apparently perpetuates or aggravates the rheumatic activity. Heart failure, as defined, whether caused by or associated with active rheumatic carditis, makes surgical management of the valve lesion mandatory as a life-saving measure. Aggressive medical therapy for heart failure, which should include vasodilator drugs and especially angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitors, provides temporary improvement only. Contrary to ongoing doctrine, treatment with steroid drugs in this context is neither life-saving nor beneficial.
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PMID:Mechanisms and management of heart failure in active rheumatic carditis. 220 Jan 47

Mitral systolic clicks and murmurs together with associated symptoms constitute a major reason for cardiologic referral. Although echocardiography with Doppler study enables characterization of the mitral valve apparatus and quantification of regurgitation, its use has resulted in an overemphasis of the technical diagnosis of mitral valve prolapse and an undervaluation of diagnosis based on physical examination. To determine the clinical significance of an auscultatory classification of mitral systolic clicks with or without precordial systolic murmurs, 1 consultant's medical records of 291 patients with these signs were reviewed. Based on initial auscultatory findings, patients were divided into: (1) single or multiple apical systolic clicks with no murmur (n = 99); (2) single or multiple apical systolic clicks and a late systolic murmur (n = 129); and (3) single or multiple apical clicks and an apical pansystolic murmur or murmur beginning in the first half of systole (n = 63). The average duration of patient follow-up was 8 years (range 1 to 30). The prognosis was excellent for patients from all 3 classes. Two cardiac-related deaths occurred: 1 each from classes 1 and 2. Mitral valve surgery was performed in 3 class 2 patients (2%) and in 2 class 3 patients (3%). No patients developed endocarditis during follow-up. Palpitations, with varying anxiety overlay, constituted a major indication for cardiologic referral in all 3 classes. Auscultatory findings were valuable to the physician for explanation and relief of patient anxiety. For patient management, use of an auscultatory classification may be preferable to the technically generated term "mitral valve prolapse."
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PMID:Use of auscultation to follow patients with mitral systolic clicks and murmurs. 187 93


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