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Query: UMLS:C0033377 (
prolapse
)
11,717
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Fulminating active rheumatic carditis has been observed for over 3 decades in this environment with no recent alteration in either the incidence or the pattern of presentation. Patients are black, seldom older than 20 years and are usually in their early teens but may occasionally be as young as five years. Heart failure 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 the initial pathology and predisposes to lengthening--or rupture--of chordae tendineae and
prolapse
of the anterior leaflet. The resultant cardiac work-overload apparently perpetuates the rheumatic activity. Heart failure, whether caused by or associated with active rheumatic carditis, makes surgical management of the valve lesion mandatory as a life-saving measure. Mitral valve repair, rather than replacement, is the surgical procedure of choice but is not always practicable when the rheumatic activity is fulminant, significant aortic regurgitation associated or the surgeon relatively inexperienced. Aggressive medical therapy for heart failure, which should include vasodilator drugs, provides temporary improvement only. Contrary to ongoing doctrine, treatment with steroid drugs is neither life-saving nor beneficial. Varying degrees of left ventricular dysfunction are encountered pre-operatively and may be a sequel of the severe regurgitant valve lesion rather than of a rheumatic 'myocardial factor'.
...
PMID:Aspects of active rheumatic carditis. 144 46
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.
...
PMID:Mechanisms and management of heart failure in active rheumatic carditis. 220 Jan 47
Regurgitation
of blood through the left atrioventricular valve owing to the rupture of one of the chordae tendineae of the valve was diagnosed in a horse with sudden-onset respiratory distress and a holosystolic cardiac murmur. Severe regurgitation was confirmed with Doppler echocardiography and
prolapse
of part of the valve leaflet was identified with B-mode ultrasonography. The rupture of one of the chordae tendineae of a right accessory cusp of the left atrioventricular valve was confirmed post mortem. Bronchiolitis, multifocal haemorrhages and haemorrhagic fibrous plaques were found in the pleura of the dorsocaudal segments of the lungs.
...
PMID:Confirmation by Doppler echocardiography of valvular regurgitation in a horse with a ruptured chorda tendinea of the mitral valve. 226 Feb 52
68 cases with 76 left ventriculographies, including rheumatic mitral valvular disease, congestive and hypertrophic types of cardiomyopathy, endocardial cushion defect, atrial and ventricular septal defects, coronary heart disease and mitral valve prolapse were analyzed with respect to the morphological and functional changes of the mitral valve and its appendages. Dynamic study with cineradiographic technic was the chief method used in this investigation. Except for ventricular septal defect, all the above-mentioned disease entities showed one or several of the changes of the mitral valvular apparatus including stenosis, insufficiency, displacement, cleft, deformity,
prolapse
and functional disorder.
Regurgitation
associated with mitral insufficiency exhibiting specific manifestations in different conditions was analyzed and its method of grading discussed. Mitral valve prolapse with its suggested method grading and functional disorder of the mitral valve were also discussed in detail.
...
PMID:[Angiographic diagnosis of lesions of the mitral valve and its appendages]. 252 46
Pulsed Doppler echocardiography was used to determine prospectively the prevalence of mitral, aortic, tricuspid and pulmonary regurgitation in 80 consecutive patients with mitral valve prolapse and 85 normal subjects with similar age and sex distribution. Mitral valve prolapse was defined by posterior systolic displacement of the mitral valve on M-mode echocardiography of 3 mm or more (40 patients), the presence of one or more mid- or late systolic clicks (61 patients), or both. Mitral regurgitation, detected by pulsed Doppler techniques in 53 patients with
prolapse
, was holosystolic in 24, early to mid-systolic in 6, late systolic in 15 and both holosystolic and late systolic behind different portions of the valve in 8. Definitive M-mode findings were present in only 27 of the 53 patients, and only 21 had mitral regurgitation audible on physical examination. Tricuspid regurgitation was evident by pulsed Doppler echocardiography in 15 patients (holosystolic in 9, early to mid-systolic in 1, late systolic in 4 and both holosystolic and late systolic in 1); 12 of these 15 patients, including all with an isolated late systolic pattern, had an echocardiographic pattern of tricuspid
prolapse
, but none had audible tricuspid regurgitation. A Doppler pattern compatible with aortic regurgitation was recorded in seven patients, all without echocardiographic aortic valve
prolapse
and only two with audible aortic insufficiency. A Doppler shift in the right ventricular outflow tract in diastole, suggestive of pulmonary regurgitation, was recorded in 16 of the 78 patients with an adequate Doppler examination: only 1 of the 16 had audible pulmonary insufficiency. Of the 85 normal subjects without audible regurgitation, pulsed Doppler examination detected mitral regurgitation in 3 subjects (holosystolic in 1 and early to mid-systolic in 2), aortic regurgitation in none, tricuspid regurgitation in 9 (holosystolic alone in 8 and both holosystolic and late systolic in 1) and right ventricular outflow tract turbulence compatible with pulmonary insufficiency in 15. The prevalence of valvular regurgitation, detected by pulsed Doppler echocardiography, is high in patients with mitral valve prolapse.
Regurgitation
may involve any of the four cardiac valves and is clinically silent in the majority of patients. The prevalence rates of mitral and aortic regurgitation are significantly higher in patients with mitral
prolapse
than in normal subjects, suggesting that alterations in underlying valve structure in the
prolapse
syndrome may indeed be responsible for this regurgitation.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
...
PMID:Pulsed Doppler echocardiographic evaluation of valvular regurgitation in patients with mitral valve prolapse: comparison with normal subjects. 353 60
A 53-year-old woman with a history of hypertension was referred for an echocardiogram by her primary care physician after an unspecified abnormal ECG. The echocardiogram showed normal left ventricular size and function; however, an isolated cleft posterior mitral valve leaflet was identified with concomitant bileaflet
prolapse
and mild mitral regurgitation. She was subsequently referred to a cardiologist for clinical evaluation. Cleft mitral valve leaflet (CMVL) is an uncommon congenital cause of mitral regurgitation. Clefts, defined as slit-like holes or defects, are hypothesized to be a result of incomplete expression of an endocardial cushion defect which most commonly involves the anterior mitral valve leaflet with a paediatric incidence of 1:1340. Clefts affecting only the posterior mitral valve leaflet are extremely rare with only four cases being reported in the medical literature. Important co-existing anomalies with either posterior and/or anterior CMVL include counterclockwise rotation of the papillary muscles, the presence of an accessory papillary muscle or mitral valve leaflet, atrial septal defects, and mitral valve prolapse.
Regurgitation
from CMVL can lead to important physiological and anatomical changes within the cardiac system.
Regurgitation
results from blood flow directly through the cleft itself or from malcoaptation from accessory chordae with or without papillary muscle distortion. Significant chronic mitral regurgitation elevates left atrial filling pressures and leads to chamber enlargement and eccentric left ventricular hypertrophy. Early detection through two-dimensional echocardiography can provide accurate anatomical images of the various mitral valve structures and identify associated congenital anomalies. Early surgical correction is preferred before mitral regurgitation causes unfavourable remodelling. Most mitral valve cleft defects can easily be repaired by suturing the edges of the cleft. If a cleft resection leads to limited residual valve tissue, the leaflet of the mitral valve can be reconstructed using an autologous pericardial patch pre-treated with buffered glutaraldehyde. Posterior CMVL is an uncommon but clinically important cause of mitral insufficiency. Early recognition of this rare clinical entity and possible co-existent anomalies can identify the patients who would benefit from surgical intervention before compensatory left ventricular remodelling and contractile dysfunction develop.
...
PMID:Isolated cleft posterior mitral valve leaflet: an uncommon cause of mitral regurgitation. 1866 88