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 31 毫秒
1.
Although bicuspid aortic valve occurs in an estimated 1% of adults and mitral valve prolapse in an estimated 5% of adults, occurrence of the 2 in the same patient is infrequent. During examination of operatively excised aortic and mitral valves because of dysfunction (stenosis and/or regurgitation), we encountered 16 patients who had congenitally bicuspid aortic valves associated with various types of dysfunctioning mitral valves. Eleven of the 16 patients had aortic stenosis (AS): 5 of them also had mitral stenosis, of rheumatic origin in 4 and secondary to mitral annular calcium in 1; the other 6 with aortic stenosis had pure mitral regurgitation (MR) secondary to mitral valve prolapse in 3, to ischemia in 2, and to unclear origin in 1. Of the 5 patients with pure aortic regurgitation, each also had pure mitral regurgitation: in 1 secondary to mitral valve prolapse and in 4 secondary to infective endocarditis. In conclusion, various types of mitral dysfunction severe enough to warrant mitral valve replacement occur in patients with bicuspid aortic valves. A proper search for mitral valve dysfunction in patients with bicuspid aortic valves appears warranted.  相似文献   

2.
Despite recent renewed interest in the detection of tricuspid valve regurgitation by echocardiographic and Doppler techniques, little morphologic information is available on dysfunctioning tricuspid valves. This report describes 45 necropsy patients with clinical and morphologic evidence of pure (no element of stenosis) tricuspid regurgitation and provides morphometric observations (anular circumference, leaflet area) of the tricuspid valve useful in determining the etiology of pure tricuspid regurgitation. Of 45 patients, 24 (53%) had pure tricuspid regurgitation resulting from an anatomically abnormal valve (prolapse in 7, papillary muscle dysfunction in 6, rheumatic disease in 5, Ebstein's anomaly in 3, infective endocarditis in 2, carcinoid tumor in 1), and 21 (47%) had an anatomically normal valve with systolic pulmonary artery hypertension (cor pulmonale in 12, mitral stenosis in 9). Anular circumference was dilated (greater than 12 cm) in patients with various causes of pulmonary hypertension, floppy valve and Ebstein's tricuspid anomaly. Leaflet area was increased in floppy valve and Ebstein's anomaly. Of the 45 patients, 24 had pulmonary systolic artery pressure measurements available for correlation with tricuspid valve morphology. Pulmonary artery pressures accurately predicted morphologically normal from abnormal valves in 16 patients (89%). Morphologic overlap occurred in six patients with pulmonary pressures of 41 to 54 mm Hg. Of these six, the additional knowledge of normal or dilated anular circumference correctly separated valves with normal and abnormal leaflets.  相似文献   

3.
Invasive data about the frequency and associated factors of tricuspid regurgitation in normals and in patients with aortic and mitral valve disease are still rare. Thus, right ventricular biplane angiograms (RAO/LAO projection), the mean pulmonary artery pressure and the presence of atrial fibrillation were analyzed with regard to tricuspid regurgitation in 30 normals and 165 patients with pure mitral regurgitation, mitral stenosis, aortic regurgitation, aortic stenosis, combined mitral valve disease or combined aortic valve disease. Patients with tricuspid stenosis or coronary artery disease were excluded. In 52 of the 195 patients tricuspid regurgitation was present. Tricuspid regurgitation occurred statistically more often in patients with mitral stenosis (33%), mitral regurgitation (48%) or combined mitral valve disease (68%) than in patients with aortic regurgitation (4%) or combined aortic valve disease (3%). In patients with aortic stenosis and in normals tricuspid regurgitation was not present. In patients with combined mitral valve disease, tricuspid regurgitation was more often present than in patients with pure mitral stenosis (p less than 0.002), despite comparable values of the mean pulmonary artery pressure, the right ventricular enddiastolic and endsystolic volume indexes, the right ventricular ejection fraction and the frequency of atrial fibrillation. Only in patients with pure mitral regurgitation tricuspid regurgitation was associated with an elevated mean pulmonary artery pressure (p less than 0.02). Differences in the right ventricular size and function did not occur between normals and patients with mitral or aortic valve disease. Therefore, the mean pulmonary artery pressure, atrial fibrillation and the size and function of the right ventricle are not major determinants for the occurrence of tricuspid regurgitation.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

4.
Ten patients with aortic stenosis and ruptured mitral chordae tendineae constituted 8% of 125 consecutive surgical cases of chordal rupture. Their ages ranged from 54 to 87 years (mean 68). Six patients presented with acute onset of congestive heart failure, and eight were in New York Heart Association functional class III or IV at the time of cardiac catheterization. Extensive mitral anulus calcification was observed by fluoroscopy in seven patients. The mean aortic valve area index was 0.4 cm2/m2 and nine patients had moderate to severe mitral regurgitation by angiography. Calcific aortic stenosis affected a tricuspid valve in nine cases and a bicuspid valve in one case. One patient had a rheumatic mitral valve and one a redundant myxomatous mitral valve; the remaining eight had no abnormality of the mitral apparatus commonly regarded as predisposing to chordal rupture. Mitral anulus calcification and ventricular anatomic and hemodynamic alterations in aortic stenosis may contribute to rupture of the mitral chordae tendineae.  相似文献   

5.
Certain clinical and mitral valvular morphologic findings are described in 83 patients (age 26 to 79 years [mean, 60]; 26 women [31%] and 57 men [69%]) with mitral valve prolapse (MVP) and mitral regurgitation (MR) severe enough to warrant mitral valve replacement. All 83 operatively excised valves were examined by the same person, and all excised valves had been purely regurgitant (no element of stenosis). No patients had hemodynamic evidence of dysfunction of the aortic valve. In each valve a portion of the posterior mitral leaflet was elongated such that the distance from the distal margin to basal attachment of this leaflet was similar to the distance from the distal margin of the anterior leaflet to its basal attachment to the left atrial wall. Two major mechanisms for the severe MR were found: dilatation of the mitral anulus with or without rupture of chordae tendineae and rupture of chordae tendineae with or without dilatation of the mitral anulus. Of the 83 patients, 48 (58%) had both dilated anuli (greater than 11 cm in circumference) and ruptured chordae tendineae; 16 (19%) had dilated anuli without ruptured chordae, and 16 (19%) had ruptured chordae without significant anular dilatation. In three patients the anulus was not dilated, nor were chordae ruptured, and therefore the mechanism of the MR is uncertain. Mitral chordal rupture was nearly as frequent in the 64 patients with clearly dilated anular circumferences as in the 19 patients with normal or insignificantly dilated anular circumferences (less than or equal to 11 cm).  相似文献   

6.
One hundred forty patients with clinical mitral insufficiency were studied with two dimensional echocardiography. Cardiac catheterization was performed in 51 patients; all had mitral insufficiency. Thirty-three patients were surgically treated. An etiologic diagnosis was made in 133 patients. Mitral valve prolapse (41 patients) was the most common cause of mitral insufficiency; the amount of valve insufficiency did not correlate with the leaflet involved or the severity of the prolapse. Patients with rheumatic disease either had combined mitral stenosis and insufficiency (27 patients) or pure mitral insufficiency (10 patients). Echocardiographic measurement of the mitral valve area separated patients with combined lesions from those with pure insufficiency. Fourteen patients had ruptured chordae tendineae; surgical findings were confirmatory in each patient who had valve replacement. Nineteen patients had left ventricular dysfunction; angiographie findings were confirmatory in each patient who underwent cardiac catheterization. Two dimensional echocardiographic findings reliably differentiated mitral insufficiency secondary to valve disease from that secondary to ventricular or papillary muscle dysfunction. Other causes of mitral insufficiency included mitral anular calcification (11 patients), idiopathic hypertrophic subaortic stenosis (5 patients), cleft anterior mitral leaflet (5 patients) and atrial myxoma (1 patient).  相似文献   

7.
BACKGROUND: Mitral regurgitation (MR) is frequently associated with aortic stenosis. Previous reports have shown that coexisting mitral insufficiency can potentially regress after aortic valve replacement. HYPOTHESIS: This study sought to assess the frequency and severity of MR before and after aortic valve replacement for aortic stenosis and to define the determinants of its postoperative evolution. METHODS: For this purpose, 30 adult patients referred for aortic valve surgery underwent pre- and postoperative transthoracic and transesophageal echocardiography and color Doppler examination. RESULTS: Mean preoperative left ventricular ejection fraction was 57 +/- 16% and remained unchanged postoperatively. Preoperative MR was usually mild to moderate and correlated with aortic stenosis severity and left ventricular systolic dysfunction. The color Doppler mitral regurgitant jet area significantly decreased during the postoperative period (p = 0.016) as left ventricular loading conditions returned to normal, suggesting an early decrease of the functional part of MR. On the other hand, the mitral regurgitant jet width at the origin remained unchanged. Statistical analysis found pulmonary artery pressure (p = 0.02) an d indexed left ventricular mass (p = 0.009) to be preoperative predictive factors of postoperative MR improvement. Predictive factors of postoperative MR severity were left atrial diameter (p = 0.02), pulmonary artery pressure (p = 0.003), and the presence of mitral calcifications (p = 0.004). CONCLUSION: In our cohort of patients with normal left venticular ejection fraction, the majority of moderate MR, associated with severe aortic stenosis, regresses early after aortic valve replacement. Mitral calcifications and/or left atrial dilation seem to be predictive factors of fixed MR.  相似文献   

8.
The mechanism of severe mitral regurgitation (MR) due to active rheumatic carditis is ill defined. This study involved 73 patients, aged 7 to 27 years (mean 13), with severe MR and active rheumatic carditis who were subjected to surgery. Sixty-one were studied retrospectively (group 1) and 12 prospectively (group 2). Active rheumatic carditis was diagnosed according to the modified Jones' criteria, morphologic appearances of the heart at operation and histology of the valve. All patients had preoperative 2-dimensional echocardiographic and intraoperative assessment of the mitral valve apparatus. The presence of mitral valve prolapse--defined as failure of leaflet edge coaptation resulting in systolic displacement of the free edge of the involved leaflet toward the left atrium--was determined in all patients. Mitral anular diameter and maximal systolic chordal length were measured at 2-dimensional echocardiography in group 2 patients and compared to values obtained from matched control subjects. Anular and chordal dimensions in 6 of the group 2 patients were correlated with precise measurements obtained at surgery. Mitral valve prolapse involving the anterior leaflet was detected on echocardiography and confirmed at surgery in 69 patients (94%). Mitral anular dilatation was observed at operation in 70 patients (96%). Maximal anular diameter was significantly greater (p less than 0.0001) than in matched control subjects (37 +/- 4 vs 23 +/- 2 mm). The mean anular dimension measured at surgery (36 +/- 3 mm) was similar to that obtained by echocardiography and individual values using the 2 methods correlated well (r = 0.93). Chordal elongation was observed in 66 patients at operation (90%).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

9.
Clinical and morphologic observations are described in 12 patients who underwent simultaneous replacement of the tricuspid, mitral and aortic valves. All 12 patients had mitral stenosis, 10 aortic valve stenosis and 2 pure aortic valve regurgitation; 5 had tricuspid valve stenosis and 7 pure tricuspid valve regurgitation. Of the 10 patients who died within 60 days of triple valve replacement, 7 had the low cardiac output syndrome, which in 4, and possibly 5, of the 7 was attributed to prosthetic aortic valve stenosis. In none of the 12 patients was the ascending aorta dilated, and in the 4 (possibly 5) patients with low cardiac output, the space between the surface of the caged poppet (4 patients) or margins of the tilting disc (1 patient) in the aortic valve position and the aortic endothelium appeared inadequate to allow unobstructed flow despite small-sized prostheses in all but 1 patient. Thus, aortic valve replacement in the setting of triple valve dysfunction is hazardous or potentially so. The relative small sizes of the hearts in these patients also make valve replacement more difficult (and hazardous) compared to hearts with larger ventricles and aortas.  相似文献   

10.
A 74-year-old woman, with a history of aortic valve replacement and open mitral commissurotomy due to rheumatic aortic and mitral stenosis, presented with dyspnea. She developed severe tricuspid regurgitation (TR), requiring tricuspid valve replacement (TVR). Despite an uneventful postoperative course, she was readmitted for dyspnea 2 months later. Trans-thoracic echocardiogram revealed severe mitral regurgitation (MR), despite mild MR at the time of TVR, which has not been previously reported. The main MR mechanism was increased left ventricular preload due to improved TR. Increased diuresis has controlled her congestive heart failure, but her MR remained moderate.  相似文献   

11.
The value of echocardiography as compared with cardiac catheterisation was evaluated prospectively in 33 consecutive patients clinically suspected of predominant mitral stenosis. Patients with clinical signs of accompanying mitral regurgitation, no matter how severe, and patients with clinical findings indicating insignificant aortic valve disease were included. Critical mitral stenosis was defined by a valve area of less than or equal to 1 cm2. Severe mitral regurgitation was diagnosed by echocardiography on the basis of left ventricular dilatation (more than 3.2 cm/m2 at end-diastole) if not explained otherwise. Significant aortic valve disease was suspected in cases with aortic valve deformity and left ventricular dilatation or hypertrophy as defined by echocardiography. Mitral valve area by echocardiography correlated well with mitral valve area calculated from catheterisation data and a good interobserver correlation was found for echocardiographic measurement. Mitral stenosis, critical or non-critical, may mask significant coexistent valve lesions; echocardiography failed to discover severe mitral regurgitation requiring valve replacement in two patients with non-critical stenosis, and significant aortic regurgitation needing valve replacement was underestimated in one patient with critical mitral stenosis. A correct echocardiographic classification with respect to surgery, however, was obtained in: (1) all patients with clinically pure mitral stenosis (nine patients), and (2) all patients with combined mitral stenosis and regurgitation when either critical stenosis or severe regurgitation was found at echocardiography (12 patients). It thus appears that two out of three patients with mitral valve disease in whom the clinical findings indicate predominant stenosis can be correctly evaluated with the echocardiogram.  相似文献   

12.
Mitral valve abnormalities have been described in Ebstein's anomaly, but acquired rheumatic mitral valve disease is an extremely rare association. We describe a classical case of Ebstein's anomaly of tricuspid valve with severe rheumatic mitral stenosis. This patient had mild mitral regurgitation, pulmonary hypertension and atrial fibrillation.  相似文献   

13.
Clinical and necropsy findings are described in 54 patients, aged 25 to 83 years (mean 53), who died within 60 days of simultaneous replacements of both mitral and aortic valves. The patients were separated into 4 groups on the basis of the presence of stenosis (with or without associated regurgitation) or pure regurgitation of each valve: 30 patients (56%) had combined mitral and aortic valve stenosis; 12 patients (22%) had mitral stenosis and pure aortic regurgitation; 8 patients (15%) had pure regurgitation of both valves; and 4 patients (7%) had pure aortic regurgitation and mitral stenosis. Necropsy examination in the 54 patients disclosed a high frequency (48%) of anatomic evidence of interference to poppet or disc movement in either the mitral or aortic valve position or both. Anatomic evidence of interference to movement of a poppet or disc in the aortic valve position was twice as common as anatomic evidence of interference to poppet or disc movement in the mitral position. Interference to poppet movement is attributable to the prosthesis's being too large for the ascending aorta or left ventricular cavity in which it resided. The ascending aorta is infrequently enlarged in patients with combined mitral and aortic valve dysfunction irrespective of whether the aortic valve is stenotic or purely regurgitant. Likewise, the left ventricular cavity is usually not dilated in patients with combined mitral and aortic valve stenosis, the most common indication for replacement of both left-sided cardiac valves. Of the 54 patients, 12 (22%) had 1 mechanical and 1 bioprosthesis inserted. It is recommended that both substitute valves should be mechanical prostheses or both should be bioprostheses.  相似文献   

14.
Modified mitral valve replacement (MVR) was performed mostly with mechanical valves in 117 patients consisting of 53 patients with mitral regurgitation (MR) and 64 patients with mitral stenosis (MS) or combined mitral valve disease (MSR). Concomitantly, aortic valve replacement (AVR) was carried out in 42 patients, tricuspid annuloplasty (TAP) in 26, tricuspid valve replacement (TVR) in 2 and other procedures in 4. There were 3 hospital deaths and 3 late deaths. In this series, 4 types of technique were utilized in order to preserve the posterior leaflet and chordae tendineae. The authors recommend the following techniques. In pure or predominant MS, after removal of the anterior leaflet and chordae, buttress sutures are placed from the valvular annulus to the posterior leaflet near its free margin. In pure or predominant MR, excising part of the posterior leaflet is added prior to the above-described technique. By using these two techniques, modified MVR can be performed for any type of valve lesion and with any kind of prosthetic valve.  相似文献   

15.
Certain clinical and morphologic findings are described in 67 patients (aged 23 to 76 years [mean 52]; 55 women [82%]) who had mitral valve replacement for mitral stenosis (with or without associated regurgitation), and simultaneous tricuspid valve replacement for pure tricuspid regurgitation (58 patients) or tricuspid stenosis (all with associated regurgitation; 9 patients). Of the 58 patients with pure tricuspid regurgitation, 21 had anatomically normal and 37 had anatomically abnormal (diffusely fibrotic leaflets) tricuspid valves. Among these 58 patients, no clinical or hemodynamic variable was useful before surgery in distinguishing the group without from that with anatomically abnormal tricuspid valves. All 9 patients with stenotic tricuspid valves had anatomically abnormal tricuspid valves. The latter group had a lower average right ventricular systolic pressure (tricuspid valve closing pressure) than those with pure tricuspid regurgitation, and none had severe pulmonary arterial hypertension (present in 20 [30%] of the 58 patients with pure tricuspid regurgitation).  相似文献   

16.
Dilation of atria occurs in patients with valvular heart disease, especially in rheumatic mitral regurgitation, mitral stenosis, or tricuspid valve abnormalities. We report a case of giant left and right atrium in the context of rheumatic mitral stenosis and severe tricuspid regurgitation in a 68-year-old woman.  相似文献   

17.
ABSTRACT. Danielsen R, Nordrehaug JE, Vik-Mo H (Department of Clinical Physiology, Haukeland Hospital, University of Bergen, Bergen, Norway). High occurrence of mitral valve prolapse in cardiac catheterization patients with pure isolated mitral regurgitation. Acta Med Scand 1987; 221:33–8. The aetiological spectrum of angiographically verified pure isolated mitral regurgitation (MR) was studied in 48 consecutive adult patients (35 males). Severe MR was found in 35 patients (73%) and moderate MR in 13 patients (27%). Mitral valve prolapse (MVP) syndrome was found in 21 patients (44%). These were younger than the rest of the study population (55±13 vs. 62±6 years, p<0.05) and 15 (71%) of them were men. Endocarditis and chordal rupture occurred in 19% and 43% of the MVP patients. Sixteen patients (33%) had MR secondary to myocardial infarction while only three patients (6%) had MR of rheumatic aetiology. Bacterial endocarditis, hypertensive heart disease, hypertrophic obstructive car-diomyopathy and mitral annulus calcification were less frequently found. Mitral valve replacement was done in 20 (57%) of the patients with severe MR and MVP was the underlying disease in 15 (75%) of these patients. In conclusion, MVP is a frequent cause of pure isolated MR and of mitral valve replacement. In contrast to the preponderance of young females amongst MVP patients in population surveys, most of the MVP patients with MR in this study are middle-aged and elderly men.  相似文献   

18.
The rate of survival, the evolution of functional cardiac status and the incidence of major complications during a 5 year period were studied in 410 patients with rheumatic mitral or aortic valve disease, of whom 200 were treated medically and 210 by surgery. The 5 year survival rates in patients with various types of rheumatic mitral valve disease were similar (45 percent for those with mitral stenosis and 46 percent for those with mitral insufficiency or mixed mitral insufficiency and stenosis). The survival rate in patients with aortic valve disease was somewhat more favorable (64 percent).Mitral valvulotomy had the most positive influence on mortality. The 85 percent 5 year survival rate of patients who underwent this procedure was significantly higher than that of patients with medically treated mitral stenosis. In patients submitted to mitral and aortic valve replacement, the survival rate was also improved in comparison with data in the corresponding medically treated groups, but to a lesser degree (70 percent for aortic valve replacement and 60 percent for mitral valve replacement). In all surgically treated groups, initial operative mortality was the primary determinant of the rate of survival at the end of 5 years.Survivors of all surgical groups had appreciable improvement in cardiac functional classification and a remarkable reduction in the incidence of heart failure and atrial fibrillation. The incidence of infectious endocarditis was significantly reduced after mitral valvulotomy, as compared with the incidence in patients with medically treated mitral stenosis. Mitral and aortic valve replacement did not reduce the incidence of infectious endocarditis. The incidence of thromboembolic phenomena was favorably influenced by mitral valvulotomy and aortic valve replacement, but not by mitral valve replacement.  相似文献   

19.
Ninety patients, aged 17 to 59 years (average 39.8 yrs) underwent triple valve replacement from January 1967 to December 1979. The aetiology was rheumatic carditis in 84% of cases. There had been previous surgery in 29 cases (19 mitral commissurotomies). All patients were severely symptomatic: 68 (76%) had atrial fibrillation and the cardiothoracic ratio was 0.70 +/- 0.085. In 24 cases, triple valve stenosis (aortic, mitral and tricuspid) was observed; 13 patients had triple regurgitation and 53 patients had mixed lesions (stenosis and regurgitation). Triple mechanical valve prostheses were implanted in 35 cases (Bj?rk or Starr), triple bioprostheses were implanted in 12 cases, and 43 patients received a combination of mechanical and bioprostheses (tricuspid bioprostheses in all 43 cases). The patients were divided into two groups according to the type of valve replacement; Group I: 57 patients, subdivided into Group IA (35 cases, 39%) with triple mechanical prosthesis, and Group IB (22 cases, 25%) with mechanical aortic and mitral valve prostheses and tricuspid bioprostheses; Group II, 33 patients, subdivided into Group IIA (12 patients, 13%) with triple bioprostheses, and Group IIB (21 patients, 23%) with mitral and tricuspid bioprostheses and a mechanical aortic valve prosthesis. Techniques of myocardial protection have have improved since the beginning of this series and at present comprise cardioplegia associated with general hypothermia to 25 degrees C and pericardial irrigation with ice cold saline. The overall operative mortality was 37% (34/90) but in 1979 alone it was only 10%.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

20.
Transmitral pressure half time (PHT) was assessed by continuous wave Doppler in 44 patients with rheumatic mitral valve stenosis (14, pure mitral valve stenosis; 15, combined mitral stenosis and regurgitation; and 15 with associated aortic valve regurgitation). The mitral valve area, derived from transmitral pressure half time by the formula 220/pressure half time, was compared with that estimated by cross sectional echocardiography. The transmitral pressure half time correlated well with the mitral valve area estimated by cross sectional echocardiography. The correlation between pressure half time and the cross sectional echocardiographic mitral valve area was also good for patients with pure mitral stenosis and for those with associated mitral or aortic regurgitation. The regression coefficients in the three groups of patients were significantly different. Nevertheless, a transmitral pressure half time of 175 ms correctly identified 20 of 21 patients with cross sectional echocardiographic mitral valve areas less than 1.5 cm2. There were no false positives. The Doppler formula significantly underestimated the mitral valve area determined by cross sectional echocardiography by 28(9)% in 19 patients with an echocardiographic area greater than 2 cm2 and by 14.8 (8)% in 25 patients with area of less than 2 cm2. In thirteen patients with pure mitral valve stenosis Gorlin's formula was used to calculate the mitral valve area. This was overestimated by cross sectional echocardiography by 0.16 (0.19) cm2 and underestimated by Doppler by 0.13 (0.12) cm2. Continuous wave Doppler underestimated the echocardiographic mitral valve area in patients with mild mitral stenosis. The Doppler formula mitral valve area = 220/pressure half time was more accurate in predicting functional (haemodynamic) than anatomical (echocardiographic) mitral valve area.  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