Clinically Suspected Severe Ischaemia-induced Mitral Regurgitation |
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Authors: | HENRIK EGEBLAD JENS BERNING |
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Abstract: | Abstract Eighteen patients with clinical signs suggesting severe mitral regurgitation secondary to ischaemic heart disease were assessed by echocardiography. Non-ischaemic diseases needing specific therapy were revealed in six patients. In the other 12 patients echocardiography demonstrated myocardial lesions explaining the mitral regurgitation. Apart from the distinction between non-ischaemic conditions and lesions induced by ischaemia, echocardiography seems to be helpful in the demonstration of severe yet operable mitral valve regurgitation due to a small ischaemic lesion. Such cases are opposed to functional mitral regurgitation caused by extensive myocardial injury as demonstrated by two-dimensional echocardiography and reflected by a minimum mitral valve/septum separation of more than 2 1/2 cm on the M-mode echocardiogram. These conditions make symptomatic improvement by mitral valve surgery unlikely and carry an extremely high operative mortality. A more precise definition by heart catheterization is required when serious clinical heart failure is not explained by the echocardiographic finding of severe global myocardial impairment. |
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Keywords: | echocardiography ischaemic heart disease mitral valve regurgitation |
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