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1.
To assess the sensitivity and specificity of previously described M mode echocardiographfc signs of mitral valve prolapse, 100 subjects with a mobile mid systolic click and 100 matched normal control subjects were prospectively studied. Late systolic posterior motion and holosystolic hammocking of the mitral leaflets were common, highly specific signs of mitral valve prolapse. When these signs were combined as a single criterion, sensitivity was 85 percent and specificity was 99 percent. Other signs, including systolic echoes in the mid left atrium, systolic anterior motion, early diastolic anterior motion of the posterior mitral leaflet and shaggy or heavy cascading linear diastolic echoes posterior to the mitral valve, were highly specific but uncommon. They occurred only in combination with late systolic posterior motion or holosystolic hammocking. The remaining signs tested did not differentiate subjects with mitral valve prolapse from normal persons.  相似文献   

2.
The natural history of uncomplicated mitral valve prolapse (MVP) is not clearly understood. To determine the site-related differences in regression and progression of MVP, 112 patients with idiopathic MVP were enrolled in this echocardiographic follow-up study. Cardiovascular complications, including dysarrhythmias (n = 3, 2.7%), overt congestive heart failure (n = 4, 3.6%), progression of mitral regurgitation over one grade (n = 28, 25.0%), newly confirmed chordal rupture (n = 1, 0.9%), and surgical repair (n = 2, 1.8%), were observed in these patients during a follow-up period of 1-13 years (mean, 4.0 +/- 2.8 years). Multivariate analysis and Kaplan-Meier analysis revealed that posterior leaflet prolapse and significant mitral regurgitation (grade >/=2) were considerable risks for cardiovascular complications. Regression of MVP was seen in 17 (18.7%) of the anterior prolapse patients; however, new prolapse was observed in 40 (35.7%) patients, mainly in posterior prolapse patients. These results suggest that site-related differences exist in uncomplicated MVP prognosis and that MVP in the posterior leaflet has a poor outcome compared to that in the anterior leaflet.  相似文献   

3.
The purpose of this study was to examine the relationship between the valvular abnormalities and auscultatory findings of patients with mitral valve prolapse (MVP). Forty patients with typical auscultatory and two-dimensional echocardiographic (2DE) findings were studied. Eleven of 14 patients with anterior leaflet MVP (group I) had mid to late systolic clicks without murmurs of mitral regurgitation, while eight of nine patients with posterior leaflet prolapse (group II) and 13 of 17 patients with combined anterior and posterior prolapse (group III) had murmurs of mitral regurgitation. In each subgroup the mitral anulus size was greater than a control group (group I = 3.8 +/- 0.1 cm, p less than 0.025; group II = 3.9 +/- 0.1 cm, p less than 0.005; group III = 4.2 +/- 0.2 cm, p less than 0.001; and control = 3.4 +/- 0.1 cm), but the largest anulus was present in patients with combined prolapse. As demonstrated by 2DE, prolapse of a single mitral leaflet may occur in many instances of MVP. Murmurs of mitral regurgitation occur frequently when the posterior mitral leaflet alone prolapses, while isolated clicks are found with anterior mitral leaflet prolapse.  相似文献   

4.
Mitral valve motion, left ventricular segmental contraction and severity of arterial stenosis were analyzed in 92 patients with coronary artery disease and 28 patients with "atypical chest pain" and normal coronary arterio-rams. Mitral valve motion was evaluated for the presence or absence of leaflet prolapse. Segmental contraction was evaluated by calculating the percent shortening of six chords of the left ventricle measured from right anterior oblique ventriculograms. The severity of disease in each coronary vessel (left anterior descending, left circumflex and right coronary) was graded on a scale of 1 (0 to 30 percent stenosis) to 5 (complete occlusion). Mitral valve prolapse was not suspected clinically but observed angiographically in 15 of 92 patients with coronary artery disease and in 5 of 28 patients with normal coronary arteriograms. In nine patients with coronary artery disease, the prolapse was restricted to the posterior leaflet, in five it was in both the anterior and the posterior leaflets and in one patient in the anterior leaflet only. Mitral regurgitation was noted in seven patients with coronary artery disease; it was mild in six and moderate in one. Among the patients with coronary artery disease, 12 of the 15 (80 percent) with mitral valve prolapse had left ventricular asynergy compared with 63 of the 77 (82 percent) without valve prolapse. The mean scores for severity of disease in the left anterior descending, circumflex and right coronary arteries were, respectively, 4.2, 2.5 and 3.2 in the patients with valve prolapse and 4.2, 2.2 and 3.5 in those without prolapse. In summary, there was no significant correlation between mitral valve prolapse and distribution of coronary arterial obstructions or abnormal patterns of left ventricular segmental contraction. There was a high frequency of mitral valve prolapse in patients with severe coronary artery disease and in those with normal coronary arteriograms and atypical chest pain.  相似文献   

5.
Eighty cases with mitral valve prolapse excluding the secondary prolapse of the mitral valve caused by known underlying diseases were studied by real-time ultrasoundcardiotomography and M-mode technic. It was thought that observation of the left ventricle with long axis sector scan was useful and sensitive technic to diagnose the mitral valve prolapse. By comparative study of M-mode technic and ultrasoundcardiotomography, echo sources and the mechanism of so called prolapse patterns such as pansystolic bowing, mid-systolic buckling and multilayered echoes were explained. Pansystolic bowing and mid-systolic buckling were considered as the reliable signs for diagnosis of anterior leaflet prolapse, but were not contributory to diagnose posterior leaflet prolapse and ultrasoundcardiotomographic technic was needed to detect the posterior leaflet prolapse. According to the mode of prolapsing findings by ultrasoundcardiotomograms classification of severity of mitral valve prolapse was undertaken and its grade was expressed as AmPn in which A and P designated prolapse of the anterior and posterior leaflet respectively and m and n indicated the grade of severity in number from zero to five.  相似文献   

6.
The sensitivity and specificity of previously described 2-dimensional echocardiographic signs of mitral valve prolapse (MVP) were assessed in 70 patients with MVP and in 100 normal control subjects. Specificity of individual signs was uniformly high, ranging from 88% for excessive motion of the posterior mitral ring to 100% for several signs including systolic arching in the parasternal long-axis view, excessive posterior coaptation and diastolic doming of the anterior mitral leaflet. Sensitivity of individual signs was low to moderate, ranging from 1% for whip-like motion of both mitral leaflets to 70% for excessive posterior coaptation of the mitral leaflets in the apical 4-chamber view. The highest sensitivity value (87%) was associated with the presence of systolic arching of 1 or both mitral leaflets in the parasternal long-axis view or systolic bowing of 1 or both mitral leaflets in the apical 4-chamber view or excessive posterior coaptation of the mitral leaflets or a combination. This increase in sensitivity was achieved without sacrificing specificity (97%). Thus, the individual 2-dimensional echocardiographic signs tested possess uniformly high specificity, but only low to moderate sensitivity; however, sensitivity can be markedly enhanced without sacrificing specificity by using selected combinations of echocardiographic signs.  相似文献   

7.
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   

8.
B Rueda  S Arvan 《Herz》1988,13(5):277-283
Incorporating prognostically related auscultatory, M-mode, 2DE and recent Doppler echocardiographic features, the following strict criteria for establishing the diagnosis of mitral valve prolapse (MVP) have been advanced: 1. auscultatory; mid-to-late systolic clicks and a late systolic murmur at the apex or mid-to-late systolic clicks at the apex which move appropriately with maneuvers that alter LV volume or late systolic murmur at the apex in young patients (coinciding that a similar murmur in elderly population is non-specific for MVP); 2. two-dimensionally "targeted" M-mode criterion: marked (greater than 3 mm) late systolic buckling posterior to C-D line (moderate 2 mm late systolic buckling or 3 mm holosystolic displacement "arouse suspicion" but do not establish MVP); 3. two-dimensional echocardiographic criteria: severe bowing of leaflet(s) on the parasternal long axis and four-chamber view (mild to moderate bowing alone are unacceptable) or left atrial coaptation point; 4. Doppler echocardiographic criteria: moderate or severe Doppler mitral regurgitation with any degree of leaflet bowing or mild Doppler mitral regurgitation with at least moderate bowing of one leaflet (mild leaflet bowing and mild mitral regurgitation can be regarded as "probable MVP"). The concept of mitral valve prolapse syndrome encompasses that which was earlier described in patients with a high prevalence of symptoms. In controlled studies, however, it has become apparent that cardiac and psychiatric symptoms can be found as frequently in normal subjects as in those with MVP. These results indicate that clinicians may have erroneously diagnosed patients with MVP because of premature acceptance that MVP is the cause of a distinctive syndrome.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

9.
Echocardiographic features of primary pulmonary hypertension   总被引:5,自引:0,他引:5  
Echocardiograms were recorded in nine patients with primary pulmonary hypertension proved at cardiac catheterization. A reduced diastolic slope of the anterior mitral valve leaflet, simulating mitral stenosis but with normal motion of the posterior leaflet, was observed in all patients. Other features found included a large right ventricular dimension (nine patients), a small left ventricular dimension (three patients), a thick interventricular septum (six patients), systolic mitral leaflet prolapse (four patients) and abnormal septal motion (four patients). The last feature was most probably due to secondary tricuspid or pulmonic insufficiency, or both. The finding of a decreased mitral valve slope, often used as a criterion for mitral stenosis, should not be accepted alone as proof of mitral stenosis; the posterior mitral valve leaflet echo must be carefully searched for and identified. This echo is often difficult to identify, but the normal motion of this structure found in all patients excludes the diagnosis of mitral stenosis as a cause for the pulmonary hypertension.  相似文献   

10.
Two-dimensional echocardiography (2-D echo) was performed in 86 consecutive patients with mitral valve prolapse (MVP) and in 25 normal subjects. In normal subjects, mitral leaflet thickness was 3.5 +/- 0.8 mm (mean +/- standard deviation) and the mitral leaflet thickness to aortic wall thickness ratio was 1.0 +/- 0.2. Patients with MVP were separated into 2 groups: those with normal mitral thickness (less than or equal to mean + 2 SD observed in normal subjects, i.e., less than or equal to 5.1 mm) and normal mitral thickness to aortic wall thickness ratio (less than or equal to mean + 2 SD observed in normal subjects, i.e., less than or equal to 1.4) (group I) and others in whom these values were increased (group II). In group I, mitral thickness was 3.6 +/- 0.6 mm and mitral thickness to aortic wall thickness ratio was 1.1 +/- 0.1, and in group II, mitral thickness was 8.8 +/- 1.2 mm and mitral thickness to aortic wall thickness ratio was 2.2 +/- 0.5. The only significant cardiovascular abnormalities in group I were mitral regurgitation in 2 patients and tricuspid valve prolapse in 1 patient. In group II, 7 patients had clinically significant mitral regurgitation, 8 had aortic root abnormalities, 4 had tricuspid valve prolapse and 6 had Marfan's syndrome. Cardiovascular abnormalities were present in 60% (18 of 30) of patients in group II and in 6% (3 of 56) of patients in group I (p less than 0.001). Two-dimensional echo enabled the identification of a subset of patients with MVP who had thickened mitral leaflets. These patients had an increased incidence of cardiovascular abnormalities.  相似文献   

11.
To clarify the role of color Doppler echocardiography in the evaluation of mitral valve prolapse, we studied 49 consecutive patients in whom the sites of mitral valve prolapse were confirmed at the time of operation. The study group consisted of 22 patients with anterior leaflet prolapse, 24 patients with posterior leaflet prolapse, and three patients with multiple scallop prolapse (one patient with both anterior leaflet and middle scallop prolapse, and two patients with both medial and lateral scallop prolapse). Two-dimensional echocardiographic diagnosis of anterior leaflet prolapse was correct in all patients. The diagnosis of posterior leaflet prolapse by two-dimensional echocardiography, however, was mistaken as anterior leaflet prolapse in 16 (13 patients with medial scallop prolapse and three patients with lateral scallop prolapse) of the 24 patients according to current diagnostic criteria for mitral valve prolapse. Eight patients with middle scallop prolapse were diagnosed correctly by two-dimensional echocardiography. Acceleration flows in the left ventricle were observed by color Doppler echocardiography in all 49 patients. The sites of acceleration flows detected by color Doppler echocardiography coincided with those of prolapse confirmed in all at the time of operation. There was a significant correlation between the maximum area of acceleration flow signals and severity of mitral regurgitation estimated by angiography. In the 13 patients with medial scallop prolapse and the three patients with lateral scallop prolapse, a regurgitant jet originated from a bulged portion of the posterior leaflet and was directed toward the opposite left atrial cavity to the bulged portion by short-axis images of color Doppler echocardiography.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

12.
The left ventricular cineangiograms of 22 asymptomatic, apparently healthy male aviators without noninvasive (echocardiographic or auscultatory) evidence of mitral valve prolapse were reviewed and compared with those of 12 men with noninvasive evidence of mild mitral valve prolapse. The maximal protrusion of the posterior mitral valve leaflet superior and posterior to a line perpendicular to the long axis of the left ventricle at end-systole was measured from the right anterior oblique left ventricular cineangiogram by repeated observation of left ventricular inflow. The values were 7.5 +/- 1.6 mm in patients without mitral valve prolapse and 11.2 +/- 3.4 mm in patients with mitral valve prolapse (mean +/- 1 standard deviation). This measurement did not exceed 11 mm in any patient without prolapse. It is concluded that: 1) with meticulous attention to angiographic landmarks of the left ventricular inflow area, the limits of normal systolic posterior mitral leaflet motion can be defined; and 2) systolic motion outside these limits constitutes a quantitative criterion for the angiographic diagnosis of mitral valve prolapse.  相似文献   

13.
The conditions associated with prolapse of the posterior leaflet of the mitral valve are multiple. The mechanisms of mitral valve prolapse as well as the pathogenesis of pain and ectopic impulse formation are reviewed. Propranolol appears to be the drug of choice for the symptomatic treatment of patients with this syndrome since it decreases myocardial oxygen demand and wall tension thus reducing or abolishing the discrepancy between myocardial oxygen demand and supply within the mitral apparatus. It has also been reported to modify the auscultatory findings associated with this condition.

The frequency of this mitral valve abnormality in patients with obstructive coronary artery disease is reviewed. It appears that prolapse of the posterior leaflet scallops in patients with significant obstructive coronary artery disease represents an intermediate stage before mitral insufficiency occurs. This group of patients with papillary muscle dysfunction includes those with prolapsed leaflets without mitral insufficiency, those with systolic murmurs and compensated heart failure and others with progressive cardiac decompensation and severe mitral regurgitation.  相似文献   


14.
Echocardiography was performed in 25 consecutive patients with angina pectoris and angiographically demonstrable coronary artery disease. Left ventricular echograms detected late or pansystolic mitral valve bowing suggesting of mitral valve proplapse in 6/25 (24%). Left ventricular angiography showed prolapse of the posterior mitral leaflet in 15/25 (60%), including 5 detected by echocardiography. Significant triple vessel coronary disease was present in 11 of 15 patients with prolapsed mitralvalve. In each of the latter a greater than 90 per cent obstructive lesion was noted in at least one coronary artery: right coronary artery, 9 subjects (82%); left circumflex coronary artery, 5 patients (33%); and left anterior descending coronary artery, 4 patients (27%). Of 15 subjects with angiographic evidence of mitral valve prolapse, 13 had left ventricular asynergy-inferior or inferoposterior in 8 subjects (62%) and anterior or anteroapical in 5 subjects (38%). Eleven subjects had vectorcardiographic evidence of transmural myocardial infarction-inferior or inferoposterior in 9 (82%) and anteroseptal in 2 (18%). A single subject with mitral valve prolapse had mild mitral regurgitation. It is concluded that: (1) coexisting prolapse of the posterior mitral valve leaflet and coronary artery disease is usually associated with triple vessel obstructive lesions, (2) severe right coronary disease, inferior left ventricular wall asynergy, and inferior myocardial infarction are important angiographic and vectorcardiographic correlates, and (3) echocardiography will detect such mitral valve prolapse in only one-third of affected cases.  相似文献   

15.
BACKGROUND: Ventricular arrhythmias are common in patients with mitral valve prolapse (MVP). Previous studies have provided evidence that a higher degree of systolic mitral valve displacement and the presence of a thickened anterior mitral leaflet are related to an increased incidence of complex ventricular arrhythmias and risk of sudden death in these patients. The aim of our study was to investigate whether QT dispersion in patients with MVP is associated with the echocardiographic degree of the prolapse and mitral leaflet thickness. METHODS: QT and JT intervals and dispersions were measured in 89 patients with primary mitral valve prolapse (26 men and 63 women with mean age 39 +/- 14 years). All patients underwent a full echocardiographic examination and a scoring system was used to determine the degree of MVP. Anterior mitral leaflet thickness was also measured. Twenty-four hour Holter monitoring was used to assess ventricular arrhythmogenesis. RESULTS: According to their echocardiographic score. patients were divided into three groups (Group A. B and C) reflecting the different degrees of the prolapse. QT dispersion in patients with the highest degree of MVP, i.e. Group C was significantly greater (65 +/- 13 ms) than that of the other two groups (Group A: 38 +/- 14 ms, P<0.005 and Group B: 45 +/- 12 ms, P<0.005). Similar differences between groups were also found for JT dispersion. Multiple regression analysis revealed that among the demographic and clinical variables that were tested, only the echocardiographic degree of the prolapse and anterior mitral leaflet thickness were independently associated with QT dispersion. Holter monitoring showed that the incidence of complex ventricular arrhythmias was also higher in patients with more severe MVP. CONCLUSIONS: Our results indicate that QT and JT dispersions are related to the echocardiographic degree of MVP and mitral leaflet thickness. The echocardiographic assessment of the severity of the prolapse may help to identify a subgroup of patients at increased risk of life-threatening arrhythmias.  相似文献   

16.
Although mitral valve prolapse is easily identified with echocardiography, the angiographic diagnosis has been poorly understood. To determine relative specificity and sensitivity of recently established radiologic diagnostic criteria, prospective comparison of left ventriculograms with echocardiograms and clinical observations in patients undergoing routine cardiac catheterization from 1975 to 1977 and retrospective review of earlier catheterization data have been performed. Four types of normal mitral valve configurations were determined during protodiastole in the right anterior oblique (RAO) projection of left ventriculograms by identifying the fulcrum, the point of attachment of the mitral leaflets to the annulus fibrosus, and the fornix, that part of the left ventricular wall between the fulcrum and papillary muscles. Prolapse was present when mitral leaflet tissue extended inferiorly and posteriorly to the fulcrum during systole. Angiographic prolapse of the posteromedial commissural scallop of the posterior leaflet was diagnosed in RAO ventriculograms in 21 patients, approximately 1.9 per cent of the adult catheterization population. All of these patients also had positive echocardiograms. Three other patients had positive echocardiograms despite normal ventriculograms. In one of these three, isolated prolapse of the middle commissural scallop of the posterior leaflet was present. No patient with a normal mitral valve echocardiogram had an abnormal ventriculogram. The proposed angiographic criteria for mitral valve prolapse have eliminated false-positive diagnoses, and permitted accurate identification in approximately 88 per cent of cases. Improved imaging and additional left ventriculographic projections will probably improve sensitivity. The frequencies of angiographic, echocardiogrphic, and clinical diagnoses of mitral valve prolapse are not significantly different.  相似文献   

17.
Forty-nine patients were studied to assess the value of M-modeand cross-sectional echocardiography in the diagnosis of mitralvalve prolapse. There were 20 normal subjects and 29 patientswith clinical and phonocardiographic evidence which suggestedprolapse. Using an arbitrary line connecting the base of theanterior and posterior leaflets at their attachment to the atrioventricularjunction, 22 of the 29 patients had abnormal arching of themitral leaflets into the left atrium on cross-sectional echocardiograms(CSE); this was not seen in the normal subjects. There were15 patients with double leaflet prolapse, five with lone anteriorand two with lone posterior leaflet prolapse. M-mode recordingsfailed to show prolapse in six of the 22 patients with positiveCSE but showed prolapse in one patient with an inadequate cross-sectionalechocardiogram. The difficulty in demonstrating prolapse onM-mode was caused by multiple systolic echoes in four subjects,and poor separation of the posterior leaflet from the posteriorleft ventricular wall echoes in two subjects. The anterior leafletwas well seen on CSE with long axis parasternal views but theposterior leaflet could not be seen on the long axis view in13 of the 29 subjects in the abnormal group; short axis fourchamber views from the apex allowed definition of the posteriorleaflet in nine of these 13 patients. We conclude that CSE is better than M-mode echocardiographyand should be used in conjunction with it for the diagnosisof mitral valve prolapse. Superior arching of the mitral leafletsinto the left atrium is the characteristic feature, and longaxis parasternal views should be supplemented by short axisfour chamber apical views.  相似文献   

18.
Sudden death occurs in a small but important subset of patients with mitral valve prolapse (MVP). Clinical criteria for identifying patients at risk for sudden death have been elusive. To determine if certain morphologic characteristics were present in hearts from patients with sudden cardiac death and MVP, autopsy hearts from persons with sudden death and isolated MVP who were previously asymptomatic or had a history of cardiac arrhythmias (n = 27) were compared with (1) hearts from patients with congestive heart failure (CHF) and mitral regurgitation (MR) secondary to MVP (n = 14), and (2) hearts from persons dying from non-cardiac causes in which MVP was an incidental finding (n = 19). Patients who died suddenly were younger than both patients with MR/CHF and incidental cases (37 +/- 10 vs 65 +/- 16 and 58 +/- 21 years, respectively, p less than 0.001). Mitral valve annular circumference, anterior and posterior mitral valve leaflet lengths, posterior mitral valve thickness, and presence and extent of endocardial plaque were greater in hearts from patients with sudden death than hearts from those with incidental MVP. Hearts from patients with MR/CHF weighed significantly more, had greater left and right atrial cavity sizes and left ventricular cavity diameter than hearts from both sudden death and incidental cases.  相似文献   

19.
Seventeen patients with accepted M mode echocardiographic criteria for flail mitral leaflet were studied. M mode echocardiograms revealed characteristic disordered mitral valve motion: (1) 16 (94 percent) had chaotic diastolic mitral motion; (2) 14 (82 percent) had systolic mitral flutter; (3) 14 (82 percent) had systolic left atrial echoes; and (4) 12 (71 percent) had systolic mitral valve prolapse. In 8 patients (47 percent) all four findings were present, with three findings present in 16 (35 percent) and two findings present in 13 (18 percent); none had fewer than two findings. Cross-sectional echocardiographic studies in 10 patients revealed a systolic whipping motion of the posterior mitral leaflet into the left atrium in all, abnormal systolic mitral coaptation in all and an abnormal mass of systolic left atrial echoes in 4. None of the first three M mode criteria were observed in 230 patients with uncomplicated “mid systolic click-late systolic murmur” syndrome; cross-sectional echocardiography in 30 of 230 patients revealed normal systolic mitral coaptation and no systolic whipping of the tip of the posterior mitral leaflet into the left atrium.  相似文献   

20.
Limitations in the long-term results of medical treatment for mitral regurgitation are well recognized, but the advances in its surgical repair have produced good results. Therefore, early surgical intervention has been the focus of treatment in Europe and America. Increased surgical intervention depends on the development of technical skills in mitral reconstruction. This study investigated presurgical factors making surgical reconstruction difficult in 103 patients who underwent mitral operations performed from April 1994 to September 1997 in our hospital. Records were reviewed retrospectively for etiology, type of operation, and the immediate result of operation. The etiology of mitral regurgitation was prolapse in 65 patients (63%), restriction in 14, normal in 11, infectious endocarditis in 10, and others in 3. The type of prolapse involved the anterior leaflet in 22 patients (34%), posterior in 28 (43%), and both leaflets in 15 (23%). Valve repair was attempted in 74 patients, of which 16 were switched to valve replacement during operation. These included anterior leaflet prolapse in 9 patients, posterior leaflet in 1, both leaflets in 3, restriction in 2 and infectious endocarditis in 1. The success rate for reconstruction of anterior leaflet prolapse was not high. The cause of mitral regurgitation was mostly prolapse of the mitral valve, in our country as well as in Europe and America. Prolapsed posterior leaflet is much more common in Europe and America, and there is a high success rate reported for its valve reconstruction. In contrast, this study cannot recommend earlier surgical intervention because of difficult repair for anterior leaflet prolapse.  相似文献   

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