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Query: UMLS:C0033377 (
prolapse
)
11,717
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
As the velocity of a fluid increases a low-pressure zone is created, this is the Venturi effect and it explains the pathogenesis of aortic valve
prolapse
(AVP) and aortic insufficiency (AI) that is observed in a subset of patients with a ventricular septal defect (VSD). The VSDs complicated by AI are restrictive with high velocity shunting through the VSD, creating a low-pressure zone that impacts the adjacent aortic valve cusp resulting in AVP and subsequent AI. AVP and AI are therefore acquired lesions. AI is absent at birth because the forces necessary to create the low-pressure zone within the restrictive VSD do not exist in utero. The risk of development of AI increases during childhood, peaking at 5 to 10 years of age. VSD closure eliminates the low-pressure zone that is the cause of ongoing aortic valve cusp deformity and, if performed early, prevents development of AI. Patients with a subarterial VSD and AVP should undergo surgery to prevent the development of AI because this complicates about half of subarterial VSDs with AVP and spontaneous closure is rare. Patients with perimembranous VSDs with AVP should be followed with serial echocardiography and undergo VSD closure if more than trivial AI develops.
Semin Thorac
Cardiovasc
Surg Pediatr Card Surg Annu 2006
PMID:Ventricular septal defect and aortic valve regurgitation: pathophysiology and indications for surgery. 1663 60
In the present report, a case complicated with Horner's syndrome after off-pump coronary artery bypass (OPCAB) was presented. This case showed
ptosis
and miosis in the left eye promptly after OPCAB. No abnormal neurological findings other than Horner's syndrome were observed in postoperative examinations including head magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), and this case was thought to have Horner's syndrome as a complication after cardiac surgery through median sternotomy.
Ann Thorac
Cardiovasc
Surg 2006 Apr
PMID:A case complicated with Horner's syndrome after off-pump coronary artery bypass. 1670 32
During transcatheter closure of an atrial septal defect with insufficient aortic rim, a standard delivery sheath was modified by cutting a bevel at the distal tip to improve device orientation. The sheath split longitudinally when attempting to recapture the closure device. Troubleshooting allowed a device to be implanted successfully. Pitfalls regarding our sheath modification and methods to overcome
prolapse
of the left atrial disk into the right atrium are discussed.
Catheter
Cardiovasc
Interv 2006 Jul
PMID:Delivery sheath tear after modification for ASD closure. 1737 73
Intimal intussusception is an uncommon variation of aortic dissection, resulting from circumferential detachment and stripping of the intima in the setting of a Stanford type A dissection. The resultant tube of detached intima may
prolapse
either antegrade into the aortic lumen or retrograde into the left ventricular cavity. We classify these forms of dissection as antegrade and retrograde Stanford type A intimal intussusception. We present two cases with intimal intussusception and a review of the current literature. The majority of previous cases have been reported in the cardiology and cardiothoracic surgical literature, with few previous radiological reports.
Int J
Cardiovasc
Imaging 2007 Oct
PMID:Radiological diagnosis and classification of antegrade and retrograde Stanford type A intimal intussusception. 1716 Apr 26
Mitral valve repair for degenerative mitral regurgitation is nowadays one of the most common valvular procedures. Different technical modifications were added to the original Carpentier's method, trying to maximise the stability of the results and to reduce the incidence of immediate complications and of late failure of the correction. Survival is good, even if recent reports showed that recurrence of mitral regurgitation can be higher than expected.
Prolapse
of the anterior leaflet remains challenging and is related to higher reintervention rates. Nevertheless, the overall success rate is high, and the increasing experience of the different surgical teams approaching this procedure will help maintain satisfactory and stable long-term results.
J
Cardiovasc
Med (Hagerstown) 2007 Feb
PMID:Mitral valve repair for degenerative mitral regurgitation. 1729 93
Case reports of traumatic aortic regurgitation caused by detached commissures are rare. We report a case of a 56-year-old man involved in a traffic accident. During his hospitalization for subdural hematoma and pulmonary contusion, he began to suffer from heart failure. He was operated on under diagnosis of severe aortic regurgitaion. The commissure between the left and the noncoronary cusps was largely detached from the aortic wall, which was easily estimated to be the cause of the prediagnosed left cusp
prolapse
. His aortic valve was replaced, and his postoperative course was uneventful.
Gen Thorac
Cardiovasc
Surg 2007 Jan
PMID:Traumatic aortic regurgitation caused by a detached commissure. 1744 71
We reviewed our experience of mitral valve repair techniques for extended commissural
prolapse
involving complex
prolapse
of either or both leaflets, due to chordal rupture or elongation. Between June 1991 and January 2005, 21 of 210 patients who underwent mitral valve repair for mitral regurgitation had extended commissural
prolapse
involving either or both of the anterior and posterior leaflets. There were 17 (81%) patients with degenerative and 4 (19%) with infective endocarditis. The distribution of diseased mitral commissural lesions was: posteromedial commissure in 14 (67%) patients, anterolateral in 6 (29%), and bilateral in 1 (5%). Reconstructive techniques included leaflet folding plasty in 10, resection-suture in 6, the sliding technique in 2, commissuroplasty in 2, and chordal shortening in 1. There were no perioperative deaths; postoperative mitral regurgitation was none or trivial in 19 patients and mild in 2. The mean follow-up period was 54 months (range, 2-155 months), and no patient required re-operation. There was one late death from a noncardiac cause at 103 months. Mitral valve repair for extended commissural
prolapse
is satisfactory. We consider leaflet folding plasty and its modification to be effective in patients who require extensive leaflet resection in the commissural area.
Asian
Cardiovasc
Thorac Ann 2007 Jun
PMID:Mitral valve repair for extended commissural prolapse involving complex prolapse. 1754 Sep 89
We described our mid-term results in repairing prolapsing aortic cusps in 21 patients with aortic regurgitation and normal aortic root morphology. Aortic regurgitation was moderate-severe in five patients and severe in 16 patients.
Prolapse
involved the left cusp in four patients (19%), the right cusp in 10 patients (47%) and the non-coronary cusp in 7 (33%) patients. Correction of the prolapsing cusp was achieved by either free edge plication, triangular resection or resuspension with polytetrafluoroethylene sutures, frequently associated to a subcommissural annuloplasty. There was no hospital death. At discharge transthoracic echocardiography, 18 patients (85%) showed no residual aortic regurgitation and three patients (14%) had trivial aortic regurgitation with a central jet. Mean clinical follow-up was 27.2+/-17.1 months (range: 10-72 months). Overall survival was 90.5%. At follow-up transthoracic echocardiography, fourteen patients (73%) were free from aortic regurgitation and five patients (26%) had mild aortic regurgitation without clinical signs of congestive heart failure. Correction of valve
prolapse
appears a reasonable extension of the original techniques of valve-preserving surgery.
Interact
Cardiovasc
Thorac Surg 2007 Feb
PMID:Repair of trileaflet aortic valve prolapse: mid-term outcome in patients with normal aortic root morphology. 1766 69
The need for reoperation remains a principal limitation of the Ross procedure and most commonly includes replacement of the neo-aortic valve. Valve-preserving aortic root replacement has recently evolved into an increasingly accepted treatment modality for patients with neo-aortic valve regurgitation. Leaflet
prolapse
, however, may be present, making composite replacement the most frequent choice. Alternatively, valve preservation may be combined with correction of leaflet
prolapse
. We describe the use of a valve-sparing procedure with correction of leaflet
prolapse
in a patient with progressive dilatation of the pulmonary autograft and severe regurgitation of the neo-aortic valve.
Interact
Cardiovasc
Thorac Surg 2007 Feb
PMID:Valve-sparing aortic root replacement with repair of leaflet prolapse after Ross operation. 1766 78
Between January 1988 and December 2003, 898 patients with rheumatic heart disease (mean age 22.4+/-10.1 years) underwent mitral valve (MV) repair. Five hundred and sixty-five patients (63%) had pre-operative atrial fibrillation. Six hundred and ten (68%) patients were in NYHA class III or IV. Four hundred and twelve (45.9%) had pure mitral regurgitation (MR) and 486 (54.1%) had mixed mitral stenosis and MR. The pathology was leaflet
prolapse
(n=270, 30%), annular dilatation (n=717, 79.8%) and calcification (n=39, 4.3%). Reparative procedures included annuloplasty (n=793, 88%), commissurotomy (n=530, 59%), chordal shortening (n=225, 25%), cusp excision/plication (n=41, 4.5%), cuspal thinning (n=325, 36%), cleft suture (n=142, 16%), decalcification (n=30, 3.3%), chordal transfer (n=13, 1.4%), and neo chordae construction (n=3, 0.3%). Early mortality was 32 (3.6%). Follow-up ranged from 6 to 180 months (mean 62.7+/-31.8 months) and was 96% complete. Six hundred and twenty-one patients (69%) had no, or trivial, or mild MV. Two hundred and seventy-seven of the 866 survivors had MR which was moderate in 153 (18%) and severe in 124 (14%) patients. Thirty-five patients underwent re-operation. There were 21 late deaths (2.4%). Actuarial and re-operation-free survival at 10 years were 92+/-1.1% and 81+/-5.2%, respectively. Freedom from moderate or severe MR was 32+/-3.9%. MV repair in the rheumatic population is feasible with acceptable long-term results.
Interact
Cardiovasc
Thorac Surg 2006 Aug
PMID:Results of mitral valve repair in rheumatic mitral regurgitation. 1767 May 93
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