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Query: UMLS:C0851184 (thinning)
11,252 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

In order to study factors influencing posterior wall thickness during diastole, echocardiograms showing the septum, mitral valve and posterior wall endocardium and epicardium in 15 normal subjects and 49 patients with heart disease were digitized. Maximum wall thickness, minimum cavity dimension and the onset of mitral valve opening are normally synchronous, and an early period of rapid wall thinning, at a peak rate of 10.7 +/- 1.7 cm/sec corresponds closely to rapid filling. In patients with ischaemic heart disease the peak rate and duration of rapid thinning were normal, but thinning preceded mitral valve opening (mean 50 msec). In 11 of 17 patients with hypertrophic cardiomyopathy the peak rate of thinning was reduced and in 2 it was increased. There was a close correlation between the peak thinning rate in this group and the peak rate of increase in dimension. In mitral stenosis peak thinning rate was frequently reduced but in some patients was normal, with the reduced rate of increase in cavity dimension maintained by reversal of septal movement. We conclude that rapid thinning is an intrinsic property of the ventricular wall which is normally associated with rapid filling, but which may be dissociated from filling by asynchronous relaxation or inflow obstruction, or may be modified by myocardial disease.
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PMID:Diastolic changes in left ventricular wall thickness studied by echocardiography. 41 5

The ability of magnetic resonance to determine regional left ventricular function was investigated in 18 patients--13 with coronary artery disease (nine with previous infarction), one with congestive cardiomyopathy, one with mitral stenosis, one with an atrial septal defect, and two without detectable cardiac abnormality. Coronal magnetic resonance images were acquired through the aortic valve and sagittal images were acquired in the plane of widest diameter of the left ventricle seen in the coronal image, both at end diastole and end systole. Regional wall motion assessed by magnetic resonance was compared with the results of anteroposterior and left lateral x ray ventriculograms by two independent observers. The left ventricular wall was divided into three segments in each plane and the motion of the segments was classified as normal, hypokinetic, akinetic, or dyskinetic. Muscle thickness was measured in each segment of the magnetic resonance images and was considered to be abnormal if in the systolic images it was less than 75% of that in neighbouring segments or if it failed to increase by at least 25% between diastole and systole. Wall motion assessments by the two methods agreed in 68 of 105 segments analysed, but differed by one class in 32 segments and by two classes in five segments. The differences can be explained by the conditions under which the investigations were performed and by the disparity between a tomographic section and an x ray projection. Magnetic resonance showed 25 segments to have abnormal wall thickness. Only one patient with infarction did not have an area of wall thinning and no patient without infarction had an area of thinning. It is concluded that magnetic resonance allows an accurate non-invasive assessment of left ventricular wall motion and thickness.
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PMID:Assessment of regional left ventricular function by magnetic resonance. 376 12

We prospectively evaluated 50 patients with mitral stenosis (43 women and 7 men; mean age 45 years) to assess the results of surgical reconstruction of the mitral valve. All patients underwent a complete echocardiographic examination before and after operation. Surgical reconstruction was extensive, and included commissurotomy, thinning of the valvular leaflets, calcification removal, splitting of subvalvular apparatus, and posterior annuloplasty. Surgical reconstruction resulted in increasing mitral functional area from 0.89 +/- 0.23 to 2.07 +/- 0.42 cm2. NYHA functional class decreased from 2.76 +/- 0.55 to 1.52 +/- 0.71. Before discharging, 10% of patients had moderate mitral insufficiency. All patients were followed at 6-month intervals in our clinic. Mean follow-up was 37 +/- 18 months. During follow-up 5 patients (10%) developed severe mitral incompetence, which required mitral valve replacement. Chi-square and Student t-test were used to analyze the correlation between variables and outcome. The occurrence of severe mitral incompetence was correlated with: the degree of enlarged left atrium; chronic atrial fibrillation; postoperative more than mild mitral regurgitation. No correlation was found with anatomical parameters detected by echocardiography, or intraoperative anatomy. In conclusion, surgical reconstruction of mitral stenosis provides satisfactory short-term results. We believe that the low mortality rate and the low incidence of complications justify an effort to save the native mitral valve before considering prosthetic replacement. More attention to the development of residual mitral incompetence with intraoperative control may improve long-term results.
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PMID:[Conservative surgical treatment of rheumatic mitral stenosis]. 755 96

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.
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PMID:Results of mitral valve repair in rheumatic mitral regurgitation. 1767 May 93

The surgical treatment of mitral valve disease in children is a challenging problem. Mitral stenosis and regurgitation may occur in isolation or together. Mitral valve repair is almost always preferable to replacement. Mitral valve replacement is not an ideal alternative to repair due to limitations of size, growth, structural valve degeneration, anticoagulation and poor survival. Surgical repair of congenital mitral stenosis must address the multiple levels of obstruction, including resection of the supramitral ring, thinning of leaflets and mobilization of the subvalvular apparatus. Sometimes leaflet augmentation is required. Repair of mitral regurgitation in children may involve simple cleft closures, edge-to-edge repairs, triangular resections and annuloplasties. Techniques used in adults, such as annuloplasty bands or artificial chords, may not be appropriate for children. Overall, an imperfect mitral valve repair may be more acceptable than the negative consequences of a replacement in a child.
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PMID:Valve reconstruction for congenital mitral valve disease. 2601 93

We report the successful repair of a rare case of regional thinning of the left ventricle after mitral valve replacement. An 80-year-old woman underwent prosthetic mitral valve replacement for mitral valve stenosis. Her postoperative course was uneventful; however, regional thinning of the left ventricular wall was detected on transthoracic echocardiography on postoperative day 7. We repaired the thinned area with a patch by using the felt sandwich technique. Postoperative echocardiography and computed tomography showed a successfully repaired left ventricular wall.
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PMID:Asymptomatic Regional Thinning of Left Ventricle After Mitral Valve Replacement. 2652 37