Background: Guidelines recommend detecting poor functional capacity (VO < 14 ml.kg.min) to assess preoperative cardiac risk.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAnn Cardiothorac Surg
January 2021
Secondary mitral regurgitation (MR) is a common valvular heart disease. Its prognostic burden in patients suffering from idiopathic or ischemic cardiomyopathy (ICM) with left ventricular (LV) dysfunction/dilation has been clearly demonstrated. Severe secondary MR is associated with an increased mortality and frequent heart failure hospitalizations.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAims: The MITRA-FR trial showed that among symptomatic patients with severe secondary mitral regurgitation, percutaneous repair did not reduce the risk of death or hospitalization for heart failure at 12 months compared with guideline-directed medical treatment alone. We report the 24-month outcome from this trial.
Methods And Results: At 37 centres, we randomly assigned 304 symptomatic heart failure patients with severe secondary mitral regurgitation (effective regurgitant orifice area >20 mm or regurgitant volume >30 mL), and left ventricular ejection fraction between 15% and 40% to undergo percutaneous valve repair plus medical treatment (intervention group, n = 152) or medical treatment alone (control group, n = 152).
Objectives: Complex structure of mitral valve and its central position in the heart limit assessment of mitral function to standardized calculated parameters assessed using medical imaging (echocardiography). Novel techniques, which allow mitral valve repair (MVr) in a beating heart, offer the opportunity for innovative objective assessment in physiologic and pathologic conditions. We report, to our knowledge, the first data of real-time chordal tension measurement during a transapical neochordae implantation.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAims: Strain delay index (SDI) allows quantification of the wasted contraction or gain of myocardial contractility expected after cardiac resynchronization therapy (CRT). The present multicentre prospective study aimed to assess the accuracy of the SDI in predicting responses to CRT in real-life patients with wide and narrow (<130 ms) QRS complexes.
Methods And Results: Implantation of a CRT device was performed in 235 heart failure patients and echocardiography data were analysable in 80% (n= 189) of patients (age 65 ± 12 years, left ventricular ejection fraction = 26 ± 8%, 63 ischaemic, 51 with narrow QRS complexes).
Background: Cardiac resynchronization therapy (CRT) produces an early improvement in left ventricular (LV) function in patients with congestive heart failure (CHF), but little is known about its effects on right ventricular (RV) function.
Aim: To assess the early effects of CRT on RV function using myocardial strain analysis.
Methods: Fifty CHF patients (New York Heart Association class III/IV, left ventricular ejection fraction [LVEF] less than 35%, QRS greater than 120 ms) were studied before and three months after CRT.
Most of patients with heart failure present a left ventricular systolic dysfunction usually, if not always, associated with a diastolic dysfunction. Clinical manifestations and physical examination allows a presumed diagnosis. Some signs guide toward a systolic heart failure: deviation of cardiac impulse, protodiastolic gallop, functional mitral insufficiency, radiological cardiomegaly associated with signs of postcapillary hypertension, anterior Q wave or complete left bundle branch block.
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