首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 11 毫秒
1.
To assess the timing and duration of mitral regurgitation in mitral valve prolapse, 20 patients with a mid-systolic click or late systolic murmur, or both (Group 1) and 16 patients with a pansystolic murmur with late systolic accentuation (Group 2) were studied with phonocardiography and echocardiography including various Doppler techniques. The subjects' ages ranged from 15 to 73 years. Mitral valve prolapse with mitral regurgitation was observed in 15 of 20 patients in Group 1 and in all 16 patients in Group 2. M-mode Doppler color echocardiography demonstrated a mitral regurgitant signal throughout systole and isovolumic relaxation in all but 1 of these 31 patients regardless of the pattern of the systolic murmur. The regurgitant signal was recorded after the click in only one patient with mitral valve prolapse in Group 1. Two of the five patients in Group 1 without two-dimensional echocardiographic findings of mitral valve prolapse had the early systolic signal of mitral regurgitation. The timing and duration of the mitral regurgitant signal detected in patients in Group 1 with pulsed or continuous wave Doppler ultrasound varied with the site of the sample volume or beam direction. In the patients in Group 2, however, the signal was demonstrated throughout systole and isovolumic relaxation by both Doppler methods. Compared with M-mode Doppler color echocardiography, therefore, pulsed and continuous wave Doppler methods were less sensitive and thus inadequate to investigate the timing and duration of mitral regurgitation in mitral valve prolapse, especially in patients with a mid-systolic click or a late systolic murmur, or both, who had mild or eccentric mitral regurgitant jets.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

2.
To characterize the spectrum of mitral regurgitation in mitral valve prolapse, one hundred patients were studied by color Doppler flow mapping. The findings were correlated with the clinical presentation and with the possible complications. Mitral regurgitation was absent in 46 patients, mild in 26 patients, moderate in 18 patients and severe in 10 patients. The jet orientation was central in 15 patients, antero-medial in 13 patients and postero-lateral in 26 patients. The regurgitation was early systolic in 7 patients, late systolic in 20 patients and holosystolic in 27 patients. A good agreement was observed between the color flow patterns and the presence, timing and radiation of a murmur. Systolic clicks were not predictors of the presence or the severity of regurgitation. The grade of mitral regurgitation was positively correlated with age, left heart enlargement and valvular redundancy. No sex difference was observed. The prevalence of serious arrhythmias or cerebral ischemic events was not significantly increased when a regurgitation was present.  相似文献   

3.
A J Kolibash 《Herz》1988,13(5):309-317
Mitral valve prolapse (MVP) is a very common clinical entity which is frequently associated with mild mitral regurgitation (MR) and which most commonly becomes clinically manifest in the third and fourth decades of life. Severe MR associated with MVP, occurs much less frequently and is most commonly seen in patients above the age of 50 years. Relatively little information is available regarding the progression of mild to severe MR in patients with MVP. This report reviews a recent study which investigated the progression from mild to severe MR in patients with MVP. The study included 86 patients, average age 60 years, who presented with cardiac symptoms and severe MR. A high incidence of MVP was seen on echocardiograms (57 of 75 [75%]) and on left ventriculography (61 of 84 [73%]). Mitral valve replacement was performed in 75 patients. Pathologically all valves appeared grossly enlarged, severely floppy and had extensive myxomatous changes with collagen dissolution. 80 patients had a pre-existing heart murmur first detected at average age 34. Patients remained asymptomatic for an average of 25 years at which time clinical symptoms first appeared. After symptoms developed mitral valve surgery was necessary in most patients within one year. This rapid deterioration could partially be attributed to ruptured chordae in 39 of 76 patients (51%) or atrial fibrillation in 48 of 86 patients (56%). 28 patients had one or more serial clinical evaluations including auscultation, chest x-ray, echocardiography, and cardiac catheterization.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

4.
Doppler echocardiography was performed in 80 consecutive patients (22 men, 58 women), aged 38 +/- 16 years, who had mitral valve prolapse diagnosed by two-dimensional echocardiography. Of the 80 patients, 16 (20%) were asymptomatic and 11 (14%) had a normal physical examination (no click or murmur). The M-mode echocardiogram was negative for mitral valve prolapse in 11 patients (14%) and equivocal or nondiagnostic in 19 patients (24%). Mitral regurgitation was evaluated using pulsed mode Doppler echocardiography and was quantified by the mapping technique as minimal or mild when a holosystolic regurgitant jet was recorded just below the mitral valve into the left atrium, and as moderate or severe when the jet was detected at the mid- or distal left atrium. Mitral regurgitation was found in 55 (69%) of the 80 patients and it was minimal or mild in 47 patients (59%) and moderate or severe in 8 (10%). In 20 (36%) of the 55 patients with mitral regurgitation by Doppler technique, a systolic murmur was not detected and each of the 20 had only mild mitral regurgitation. Left atrial and left ventricular size were significantly smaller in patients with mild or no regurgitation as compared with the eight patients with moderate or severe regurgitation. These eight patients were all men (six over 50 years of age) who usually presented with dyspnea and a holosystolic murmur; the mitral valve prolapse was holosystolic by M-mode and involved both leaflets by two-dimensional echocardiography.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

5.
Atrial and ventricular arrhythmias were characterized by ambulatory electrocardiography in 31 patients with nonischemic mitral regurgitation (MR), 17 of whom had echocardlographic evidence of mitral valve prolapse (MVP) and 14 of whom had other causes of MR. Frequent and complex arrhythmias were common and equally prevalent in each MR subgroup, whether or not MVP was present. Multiform ventricular ectopy was found in 77%% (24 of 31), ventricular couplets in 61 % (19 of 31), and ventricular salvos or ventricular tachycardia in 35% (11 of 31) of patients with MR. Arrhythmias in patients with MR were significantly more prevalent than in 63 patients with MVP who had no evidence of MR. Among patients with MVP, excess arrhythmias associated with MR were most striking with respect to frequent ventricular premature complexes (41 % with MR vs 3 % without MR), multiform ventricular ectopic activity (88% vs 43%), ventricular couplets (65% vs 6%), and ventricular salvos or ventricular tachycardia (35 vs 5 %) (p <0.005 for each comparison). These data demonstrate that complex arrhythmias are common in patients with nonischemic MR irrespective of etiology, and that these arrhythmias are more strongly associated with hemodynamically important MR than with MVP alone.  相似文献   

6.
7.
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)  相似文献   

8.
9.
The purpose of this paper is to check the usefulness of dynamic phonocardiography for mitral valve prolapse (MVP) diagnosis, especially in apparently silent cases, or with late-systolic click. In fact, possible MVP or mitral valve regurgitation can be shown. 148 patients (58 males, 90 females) have been examined by basal and dynamic phonocardiography and M-echocardiography. Patients were recruited for routine medical examination or during investigations for other causes or to explain evocative MVP troubles. Provocative tests by amyl nitrite, isoproterenol and methoxamine registered a late-systolic click in 17 normal cases and a late-systolic murmur in 22. M-echo demonstrated MVP in 142 cases (96%), with a slight prevalence of late-systolic MVP; tricuspid valve prolapse coexisted in 8 cases and aortic regurgitation in 12. Today echocardiography is the most important examination, but all our data point to the usefulness of dynamic phonocardiography for MVP diagnosis: in our opinion, the integration of both techniques represents the most correct approach.  相似文献   

10.
Opinion statement  
–  It is well recognized that the floppy mitral valve (FMV) complex is the central issue in the FMV, mitral valve prolapse (MVP), and mitral valvular regurgitation (MVR) story. MVP associated with the FMV results from the systolic movement of portions or segments of the FMV complex into the left atrium (LA). Prolapse of the FMV results in unique forms of mitral valvular dysfunction and MVR. When the FMV is recognized as the basic point of reference, diagnostic and nosologic characterizations are simplified. Each of the consequences of FMV dysfunction—MVP, MVR, and FMV surface phenomena—are dynamic entities and contribute to the symptoms and clinical course in this patient population.
–  Although MVP may occur in the absence of a FMV in individuals with small left ventricular (LV) volume, hyperdynamic, or hypercontractile LV, we do not consider this phenomenon as part of FMV/MVP/MVR.
–  The natural history of the FMV/MVP/MVR is long, and understanding the life history requires long-term follow-up with serial evaluations.
–  Identification of those individuals with FMV/MVP whose symptoms are related to, or associated with, autonomic nervous system dysfunction (ie, the FMV/MVP syndrome) is important, as this distinction has diagnostic and therapeutic implications.
–  In general, patients with FMV/MVP should receive antibiotic prophylaxis for infective endocarditis.
–  Data suggest that therapy with angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitors for FMV/MVP and significant MVR may slow the natural regression of the disease.
–  Surgical therapy should be considered in patients with significant MVR and symptoms related to MVR.
–  Explanation for the nature of these symptoms, reassurance, avoidance of volume depletion, catecholamines or other cycle-AMP stimulants and a regular exercise program constitute the basic principles of management for patients with FMV/MVP syndrome.
  相似文献   

11.
12.
Few data exist regarding the relationship of valvular anatomy and coaptation to the presence of mitral regurgitation (MR) in patients with mitral valve prolapse (MVP). Therefore this study was undertaken to assess the ability of two-dimensional echocardiographic features of mitral valve morphology to predict the presence, direction, and magnitude of MR as assessed by color Doppler flow imaging. MR was present in 21 of 46 patients with MVP on two-dimensional echocardiography. Echocardiograms were specifically evaluated for leaflet apposition, leaflet morphology, and mitral anulus diameter. Color flow images were analyzed for presence of MR, direction of the regurgitant jet, and area encompassing the largest jet visible in any view. Abnormal mitral leaflet coaptation on two-dimensional echocardiography was strongly associated with the presence of MR (p = 0.003), being present in 15 of 21 patients with as compared with 5 of 25 patients without MR. Similarly, mitral leaflet thickness and MR were closely associated (p = 0.0035), with the latter being present in 9 of 30 patients with normal and 12 of 16 patients with excessive leaflet thickness. MR jet direction tended to be anterior to central with posterior leaflet prolapse and posterior or central with anterior leaflet prolapse (p = 0.02). Maximal jet area of MR tended to be larger in patients with compared with those without mitral annular dilatation (5.4 +/- 2.3 versus 2.1 +/- 1.9 cm2, p = 0.001), and in those with abnormal rather than normal leaflet thickness (4.5 +/- 2.7 versus 2.0 +/- 1.6 cm2, p = 0.009). Thus the presence, direction, and size of MR jets in MVP are related to structural abnormality of the mitral apparatus on echocardiography.  相似文献   

13.
BACKGROUND AND AIM OF THE STUDY: Mitral regurgitation (MR) shows different characteristics in mitral valve prolapse (MVP); hence, it is important to assess MR severity accurately in these patients. The study aim was to compare Doppler echocardiographic methods in making such assessment. METHODS: Forty-seven patients with confirmed MVP and at least moderate mitral insufficiency, as established by Doppler echocardiography, were studied. Quantitative Doppler was used as the reference standard method. Color Doppler mapping was used to determine regurgitant jet area (JA/LAA), flow convergence (EROA-PISA) and vena contracta width (VCW). Systolic pulmonary venous flow reversal (SPVFR) and mitral E-wave velocity were also monitored. RESULTS: Univariate analysis showed severe MR to be significantly correlated to age, presence of atrial fibrillation, left ventricular systolic and diastolic diameter, left atrial diameter, mitral E velocity, JA/LAA, VCW, EROA-PISA and the presence of SPVFR. On multivariate analysis, the strongest determinants of severe MR were EROA-PISA, VCW and E velocity. The greatest area under the receiver-operator curve for diagnosing severe MR was observed with EROA-PISA. The 45-mm2 threshold of EROA-PISA had the highest risk ratio of severe MR with a high sum of sensitivity and specificity. However, the JA/LAA had the lowest risk ratio and negative predictive value for severe MR. CONCLUSION: PISA, VCW, E velocity and SPVFR measurements may be used to evaluate MR severity semi-quantitatively in patients with MVP; however, the ratio of JA/LAA appears to be a less reliable method in this respect.  相似文献   

14.
15.
Mitral valve prolapse (MVP), often the result of myxomatous degeneration of the mitral valve, is the most commonly known pathologic entity leading to pure mitral regurgitation (MR). Reconstruction of the mitral valve rather than replacement is particularly applicable to this pathologic defect, but is not often used in the U.S. Experience with reconstruction of the mitral valve for MR secondary to MVP during the period January 1970 to January 1984 was reviewed. A total of 479 patients with mitral valve disease underwent operation during this period, 82 (17%) of whom had MR secondary to MVP. Thirty-one patients (6%) had valve reconstruction by a technique of leaflet plication and posteromedial anuloplasty. Eleven of these patients had associated cardiac disease requiring correction: 2 requiring aortic valve replacement and 9 requiring coronary artery bypass grafting procedures. One hospital death (3%) and 6 late deaths (19%) occurred, of which only 3 were related to cardiac factors. Major complications included recurrent MR in 5 patients and cerebral embolus in 1 patient. The adjusted 5-year survival rate was 89 +/- 6 (mean +/- standard error of the mean), and the overall survival rate of patients free of cardiac-related complications was 73 +/- 9%. Thus, reconstruction of the mitral valve is a highly effective surgical approach to the management of symptomatic patients with MR secondary to MVP, and its use is favored over replacement in the management of these patients.  相似文献   

16.
Severe mitral regurgitation requiring surgery is the most common life-threatening complication of mitral valve prolapse (MVP) and is due to progressive myxomatous change in the valve. We identified all residents of New South Wales, Australia, who had mitral valve surgery for myxomatous valve disease during 1982 and, using these data and the adult population statistics from 1982, estimated the cumulative risk of valve surgery in patients with MVP. In 1982, 50 of the 5.36 million New South Wales residents required surgery for this complication of MVP. Of the 50, 36 were men and 14 were women, which was significantly different from the population sex distribution (p less than 0.02) for mean age +/- SD of 60 +/- 11 years (range, 26-78 years). Using our previously determined 4% prevalence of adult MVP in New South Wales, we estimated the number of male and female patients with MVP at risk for each 5-year age interval and calculated age-specific event rates. The results show that the cumulative risk is minimal below the age of 50 years but then rises steeply, particularly in men. The risks in men aged 50, 60, and 70 years (with 95% confidence intervals) were 1:202 (130-448), 1:53 (37-82), and 1:28 (22-41), respectively. In women, the risk was less than half that in men (p less than 0.001).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

17.
K Iga  K Hori  S Takahashi 《Chest》1990,98(4):1017-1019
A grade 4/6 systolic murmur, systolic anterior motion of the mitral valve (SAM), and severe mitral regurgitation (MR) documented by two-dimensional Doppler echocardiography developed suddenly on the structurally normal heart of a patient with idiopathic portal hypertension. The patient did not have signs of congestive heart failure and the aforementioned phenomenon disappeared completely when the patient was in hepatic failure. This could be explained by a change in circulating blood volume either by gastrointestinal hemorrhage or hepatic failure.  相似文献   

18.
To assess the reliability of M-mode echocardiographic patterns of mitral valve prolapse (MVP) (echo MVP) in detection of morphologic evidence of MVP (morphologic MVP), operatively excised mitral valves and corresponding M-mode echocardiograms from 65 patients with chronic, severe, isolated, pure mitral regurgitation (MR) were studied. Of the 65 patients, 45 (69%) had echo MVP (either holosystolic or mid-to-late systolic prolapse patterns on preoperative M-mode echograms) and 42 (93%) of them had morphologic MVP; of the 3 without morphologic MVP, 2 had ruptured chordae tendineae from infective endocarditis and 1 had papillary muscle dysfunction from atherosclerotic coronary heart disease. Of the 20 patients without echo MVP, 14 (70%) had no morphologic MVP (9 had papillary muscle dysfunction from coronary heart disease, 4 had infective endocarditis on previous normal valves and 1 had rheumatic heart disease). Of the 48 patients with morphologic MVP, 42 (88%) had echo MVP and most had considerably dilated mitral anulae; the other 6 had ruptured chordae tendineae with less degrees of anular dilatation. Of the 17 patients without morphologic MVP, 3 had echo MVP (coronary artery disease in 1 and infective endocarditis on a previous normal valve in 2); of the 14 with neither echo nor morphologic MVP, 9 had papillary muscle dysfunction from coronary artery disease, 4 had infective endocarditis on previously normal valves and 1 had rheumatic heart disease. The patients with very dilated mitral anuli and leaflet areas generally had holosystolic (hammocking) patterns on echo; the patients with small anuli and leaflet areas usually had mid-to-late systolic (buckling) prolapse patterns.  相似文献   

19.
OBJECTIVES: The purpose of this study was to assess the clinical feasibility of three-dimensional (3D) reconstruction of color Doppler signals in patients with mitral regurgitation. BACKGROUND: Two-dimensional (2D) color Doppler has limited value in visualizing and quantifying asymmetric mitral regurgitation. Clinical studies on 3D reconstruction of Doppler signals in original color coding have not yet been performed in patients. We have developed a new procedure for 3D reconstruction of color Doppler. METHODS: We studied 58 patients by transesophageal 3D echocardiography. The jet area was assessed by planimetry and the jet volumes by 3D Doppler. The regurgitant fractions, the volumes, and the angiographic degree of mitral regurgitation were assessed in 28 patients with central jets and compared with those of 30 patients with eccentric jets. RESULTS: In all patients, jet areas and jet volumes significantly correlated with the angiographic grading (r = 0.73 and r = 0.90), the regurgitant fraction (r = 0.68 and r = 0.80) and the regurgitant volume (r = 0.66 and r = 0.90). In patients with central jets, significant correlations were found between jet area and angiography (r = 0.86), regurgitant fraction (r = 0.64) and regurgitant volume (r = 0.78). No significant correlations were found between jet area and angiography (r = 0.53), regurgitant fraction (r = 0.52) and regurgitant volume (r = 0.53) in the group of patients with eccentric jets. In contrast, jet volumes significantly correlated with angiography (r = 0.90), regurgitant fraction (r = 0.75) and regurgitant volume (r = 0.88) in the group of patients with eccentric jets. CONCLUSIONS: Three-dimensional Doppler revealed new images of the complex jet geometry. In addition, jet volumes, assessed by an automated voxel count, independent of manual planimetry or subjective estimation, showed that 3D Doppler is also capable of quantifying asymmetric jets.  相似文献   

20.
To assess left ventricular diastolic filling in mitral valveprolapse (MVP), we studied 22 patients with idiopathic MVP and22 healthy controls matched for sex, age, body surface areaand heart rate. A two-dimensional, M-mode and Doppler echocardiographicexamination was performed to exclude any cardiac abnormalities.The two groups had similar diastolic and systolic left ventricularvolumes, left ventricle mass and ejection fraction. Dopplermeasurements of mitral inflow were; E and A areas (the componentsof the total flow velocity-time integral in the early passiveperiod of ventricular filling, E; and the late active periodof atrial emptying, A), the peak E and A velocities (cm. s–1),acceleration and deceleration half-times (ms) of early diastolicrapid inflow, acceleration time of early diastolic flow (AT),total diastolic filling time (DFT) (ms), and the decelerationof early diastolic flow (cm. s–2). From these measurementswere calculated: peak A/E ratio (A/E), E area/A area, the earlyfilling fraction, the atrial filling fraction, AT/DFT ratio.All the Doppler measurements reported are the average of threecardiac cycles selected at end expiration. The mean peak A velocity,A/E velocity ratio, deceleration half time and atrial fillingfraction were each significantly higher for subjects presentinga MVP (60±12cm. s–1 vs 49±14, P <0.00898±13% vs 64±12%, P <0.0001; 120±36ms vs 92±11, P <0.002; 0.45±0.14 vs 0.36±0.08P <0.02). The opposite was found for the mean decelerationof early diastolic flow, which was significantly lower (290±150cm.s–2vs 410±122, P <0.007). None of the remaining parameterswas significantly different. In conclusion, we have documenteda different pattern of ventricular filling in patients withMVP compared to healthy subjects. Other investigations are neededto clarify the significance and the causes of these observations.  相似文献   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号