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

Prolapse of the mitral valve is described in two patients with the Ebstein's anomaly of the tricuspid valve. This association has not been described previously. It is probable, however, that this association is not a rare one, but that clinical features of the prolapsing mitral valve are obscured by those resulting from the malformed tricuspid valve. Opportunity also was provided to study anatomically the mitral valve of a patient known to have a systolic click and a late systolic murmur (the Barlow syndrome). Although there have been several anatomic descriptions of floppy mitral valve at necropsy, they have been extremely rare in patients known to have the classic auscultatory features of the Barlow syndrome.
Am J Cardiol 1976 Sep
PMID:Prolapse of the mitral valve is described in two patients with the Ebstein's anomaly of the tricuspid. 13 33

Systolic prolapse of the tricuspid valve is a relatively unknown anatomo-clinical entity. In this communication etiology, clinical significance and diagnostic problems of this condition are reported and discussed. The frequent association with mitral valve prolapse and the coexistence of skeletal and cardiac anomalies strongly suggest the role of congenital factors and the degenerative nature of this valvular abnormality. Pathophysiology of leaflets prolapse remains unexplained for those few reported cases of isolated tricuspid invovlement. The clinical diagnosis of tricuspid valve prolapse is difficult, since the characteristic physical signs of tricuspid incompetence are uncommon, while apical mid-systolic click-late systolic murmur may indicate mitral valve prolapse, tricuspid valve prolapse, or a combination of the two. In the reported cases selective right ventriculography (R.A.O.) has shown pansystolic or late systolic prolapse of anterior and inferior leaflets (without or with varying degree of tricuspid incompetence) or isolated late systolic prolapse of the inferior cusp. M-mode echocardiography has shown great value in the diagnosis of tricuspid valve prolapse. On the echocardiogram several types of abnormalities have been noted which correlated well to angiocardiographic data. Tricuspid valve prolapse is of clinical importance, since this condition may be associated with significant tricuspid incompetence, a high incidence of cardiac arrhythmias, and possibly with bacterial endocarditis.
G Ital Cardiol 1979
PMID:[The tricuspid valve prolapse. Clinical significance and diagnostic problems (author's transl)]. 45 98

Systolic honks have so far been synonymous with prolapse of the mitral valve leaflet. Evidence of tricuspid valve involvement in two cases is presented. These patients developed systolic honk during the deterioration of their congestive heart failure. Simultaneous recordings of echocardiograms and phonocardiograms showed fluttering of the tricuspid valve, coinciding with the systolic honk. This fluttering was not seen when honk was absent. The mechanism of production of this honk is discussed.
Clin Cardiol 1979 Feb
PMID:Systolic honk in heart failure: its origin and mechanism of production. 49 8

Quantitative angiographic findings were reviewed in 40 patients with significant mitral regurgitation classified into three etiologic groups: group I, primary mitral regurgitation (prolapse, ruptured chordae); group II, mixed stenosis and regurgitation of rheumatic origin; and group III, cardiomyopathic mitral regurgitation. For patients in both groups I and II, left ventricular end-diastolic volume was directly related to regurgitant fraction, and ejection fraction was generally well maintained. In contrast, patients in group III had a depressed ejection fraction (less than 0.40) and end-diastolic volume that was disproportionately increased in relation to the degree of regurgitation. Left ventricular end-diastolic pressure was a poor indicator of severity of regurgitation in all patient groups. There was a significant negative correlation between forward cardiac index and regurgitant fraction. There was significant relation, although with considerable variation, between the normalized V wave and regurgitant fraction. The graphs of chamber size, ejection fraction and hemodynamic measures plotted against the severity of regurgitation in different patient groups provide a perspective for interpreting the findings in individual patients.
Am J Cardiol 1977 Feb
PMID:Ventriculographic and hemodynamic features of mitral regurgitation of cardiomyopathic, rheumatic and nonrheumatic etiology. 55 77

To examine problems in echocardiographic diagnosis of mitral valve prolapse, multiple crystal cross-sectional echocardiography and single crystal recordings derived from the multiple crystal array were used to study 45 clinically normal children aged 3 to 15 years (Group A), 26 children aged 2 to 10 years with known mitral valve prolapse (Group B), 12 children with a catheterization-proved large left to right shunt at the ventricular level (Group C) and 8 children with catheterization-proved left ventricular outflow tract obstruction (Group D). Children in Groups A and B were not studied hemodynamically. Children in Groups C and D had no evidence of mitral valve prolapse on angiography and were studied echocardiographically to determine the effect of changes in ventricular shape on the patterns of mitral valve motion. In the real time cross-sectional studies, normal patients demonstrated a spectrum of mitral valve motion in which the bodies of the anterior and posterior leaflets became slightly horizontal with systolic ejection. The mitral apparatus assumed a curvilinear funnel shape. Arching of the leaflets into a horizontal configuration was more striking in the presence of either left ventricular dilatation in left to right shunt or involvement of the anterior mitral anulus in subaortic stenosis (two patients) and was associated with false positive M mode tracings suggesting mitral valve prolapse. This latter configuration was easily differentiated from the superior motion of the body of the leaflets in true prolapse. Studies of single crystal M mode recordings derived form the cross-sectional array in known locations from six normal patients revealed M mode patterns of pseudoprolapse in tracings derived from the leaflet body and patterns of normal motion at the free edge. In contrast, superior-posterior prolapse visualized in cross-sectional studies in patients with the click-murmur syndrome was associated with abnormal M mode recordings from all parts of the leaflet, including the free edge, although the abnormalities were most striking in tracings derived from the leaflet body. The M mode echocardiographic findings of mitral valve prolapse in both normal patients and patients with the click-murmur syndrome were dependent upon transducer angulation and the portion of the valve examined. The critical differentiation of the spectrum of normal valve motion from prolapse requires careful evaluation of echoes from the free edge of the leaflet where the posterior and anterior leaflet echoes coapt in early systole.
Am J Cardiol 1977 Mar
PMID:Echocardiographic spectrum of mitral valve motion in children with and without mitral valve prolapse: the nature of false positive diagnosis. 55 83

Clinical and echo-phonomechanocardiographic reports. The results concerning 7 subjects with mitral valve prolapse (M.V.P.), all members of the same familiar group, are reported. The anamnestic investigation for cardio-vascular deseases, Marfan's syndrome or other abnormalities referred to mesenchimopathies has been negative. No subject with M.V.P. has referred subjective cardio-vascular symptoms nor radiological, ecgraphic and echo-phonomechanocardiographic signs of reduced cardiac function, have been pointed out. The phonomechanocardiographic tracings have shown a variable and low-amplitude click. The echocardiographic tracings have shown a U-shaped (3 cases) and double U-shaped (1 case) pansystolic, early systolic (2 cases) and of doubtful classification (1 case) prolapse. The hypothesis of an autosomal dominant form of inheritance of the desease with not yet clear mechanism of genetic transmission is confirmed. Furthermore, environmental and genetic factors that interfere with the orderly valvular formation at a certain stage of the fetal development, are referred. The Authors remark the necessity of further investigations, among more familiar groups, for identifying the genetic-environmental factors, that, eventually, could have any implication in the ethiopathogenetic mechanism of the disease. The report of "silent" forms and the not yet completely known evolution of the M.V.P. don't justify its not-recognition.
G Ital Cardiol 1977
PMID:[Mitral valve prolapse in a family group. Clinico-instrumental findings]. 59 36

Twenty-one patients with polymyositis were prospectively examined with echocardiography, phonocardiography and electrocardiography. Cardiac performance, estimated with echocardiography, was enhanced as shown by a significant (P less than 0.01) increase in ejection phase indexes of left ventricular function compared with values in a matched control group. Known causes of the high output state, such as anemia or thyrotoxicosis, were not clinically evident. There was no evidence of left ventricular enlargement, left ventricular wall hypertrophy, or left atrial enlargement in the echocardiogram or chest X-ray film. The echocardiogram showed systolic mitral valve prolapse in 11 of 17 patients (65 percent) with an adequately imaged mitral valve; midsystolic clicks were present in 7 of these. One patient, who did not have prolapse, had echocardiographic evidence of a small pericardial effusion. Electrocardiographic abnormalities were present in 11 of 21 patients (52 percent) and included evidence of atrioventricular conduction disturbances, atrial and ventricular arrhythmias and left atrial abnormality. The pathophysiology of mitral valve prolapse and increased systolic left ventricular function in polymyositis remains uncertain; however, the spectrum of cardiac abnormalities, detected noninvasively in 16 of 21 of our patients (76 percent) may represent a high frequency rate of cardiac involvement in this disease.
Am J Cardiol 1978 Jun
PMID:Cardiac manifestations in polymyositis. 66 23

The occurrence of mitral regurgitation in ankylitis is very unusual. The case reported herein is a remarkable one because the subaortic bump at the base of the anterior mitral leaflet, the mose characteristic aspect of the heart involvement in this disease, was visualized for the first time by echocardiography. Moreover, the prolapse of the mitral leaflets was documented; it allows for a new understanding as far as the mechanism of the regurgitation is concerned.
G Ital Cardiol 1978 May
PMID:[Mitral and aortic regurgitation: a rare association in ankylosing spondylitis (author's transl)]. 66 14

Mitral leaflet prolapse syndrome has been associated with anginal chest pain, atypical chest pain, electrocardiographic abnormalities and positive stress electrocardiograms. These features overlap those of ischemic heart disease. Furthermore, coronary artery disease is frequently associated with mitral leaflet prolapse. This study evaluated the usefulness of stress myocardial scintigraphy in distinguishing these two disorders. Thirty-two patients with an angiographic diagnosis of mitral leaflet prolapse were studied. Of the 22 patients (8 men and 14 women, mean age 48 years) with a normal coronary arteriogram, 5 had "typical" angina pectoris, 6 had resting electrocardiographic abnormalities and 6 had a positive stress electrocardiogram; all 22 patients had a normal stress myocardial scintigram. Of the 10 patients (7 men and 3 women, mean age 55 years) with at least 70 percent stenosis of one coronary artery, 6 had "typical" angina pectoris, 1 had resting electrocardiographic abnormalities and 7 had a positive stress electrocardiogram. Nine of these 10 patients had one or more demonstrable perfusion defects on stress myocardial scintigrams. It is concluded that mitral leaflet prolapse syndrome is not associated with regional myocardial ischemia as demonstrated with stress scintigraphy, and that stress scintigraphy, a noninvasive technique, is useful in distinguishing the mitral prolapse syndrome from mitral prolapse associated with coronary artery disease.
Am J Cardiol 1978 Nov
PMID:Stress myocardial imaging in mitral leaflet prolapse syndrome. 70 87

Intending to find out which is the prevalence of mitral valvular prolapse in cases of ischemic cardiopathy with "normal" coronariography, a review was made of the coronary-ventriculographic studies at the I.N.C. archives, which showed as clinical diagnosis that of ischemic cardiopathy with "normal" coronaries. In the present studies we record 47 cases showing chest angina and/or electrocardiographic changes in rest or effort tests, compatible with myocardic ischemia and coronariography undoubtedly normal. We found 30 cases (63.8%) showing strong evidence of mitral prolapse in the left cineventriculography taken in right-front oblique position.
Arch Inst Cardiol Mex
PMID:[Prolapse of the mitral valve]. 70 34


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