Left ventricular function often deteriorates after mitral valve replacement for mitral regurgitation. It has been postulated that disruption of the mitral valve apparatus at operation is a major mechanism of postoperative dysfunction. The hypothesis tested in this investigation was that chordal preservation results in more favorable left ventricular function. Sixty-nine patients with isolated mitral regurgitation who underwent mitral valve replacement were studied before and 6 months after operation by treadmill exercise testing, catheterization, echocardiography, and radionuclide angiography. Nine patients underwent mitral valve replacement with preservation of the entire mitral apparatus and five with preservation of the posterior leaflet and attached chordae. The remaining 55 had mitral valve replacement with complete excision of the native valve. Preoperatively, there were no differences among groups in age, gender, exercise capacity, cardiac index, rest or exercise ejection fraction, fractional shortening, or pulmonary artery pressures. There were four perioperative deaths (7%) and eight late deaths among the 55 patients with chordal resection but no early or late deaths of patients whose chordae were preserved (p = 0.05). In patients in whom the chordae were excised, exercise capacity, left ventricular systolic dimensions, and cardiac index did not improve after mitral valve replacement, and left ventricular function deteriorated, as evidenced by a reduction of both the resting and exercise ejection fractions (from 46% +/- 13% to 31% +/- 13%, p = 0.0001, and from 49% +/- 12% to 37% +/- 14%, p = 0.0007, respectively) and fractional shortening (from 34% +/- 10% to 26% +/- 14%, p = 0.0001). In contrast, exercise capacity improved after mitral valve replacement in patients in whom the entire apparatus was spared (by 4 +/- 3 minutes, p = 0.05), left ventricular systolic dimensions decreased (from 44 +/- 8 to 36 +/- 9 mm, p = 0.03), and left ventricular function was maintained or improved, as evidenced by preservation of the resting ejection fraction (preoperative, 50% +/- 14%; postoperative, 54% +/- 11%; p = no significant difference), exercise ejection fraction (46% +/- 16% versus 52% +/- 9%, p = no significant difference), fractional shortening (from 31% +/- 9% to 28% +/- 9%, p = no significant difference), and an increase in the cardiac index (from 2.0 +/- 0.3 to 2.7 +/- 0.5 L/min/m2, p = 0.05). No statistically significant differences between posterior chordal resection only and preservation of the entire apparatus were found.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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Eur Heart J Open
January 2025
Department of Medicine, Cardiovascular Precision Medicine Center, Hadassah Hebrew University Medical Center, P.O. Box 12000, 9112001 Jerusalem, Israel.
Aims: Mitral valve prolapse (MVP) is a common valvular disorder associated with significant morbidity and mortality, with a strong genetic basis. This study aimed to identify a mutation in a family with MVP and to characterize the valve phenotype in LTBP2 knockout (KO) mice.
Methods And Results: Exome sequencing and segregation analysis were performed on a large family with MVP.
Int J Cardiol Cardiovasc Risk Prev
March 2025
Department of Cardiology, National University Heart Centre Singapore, Singapore.
Introduction: The severity of mitral stenosis (MS) is commonly assessed using mitral valve area (MVA) measured with transthoracic echocardiography (TTE). The dimensionless index (DI) of mitral valve (MV) was recently studied in degenerative MS. We evaluated DI MV in rheumatic MS and studied its relationship with clinical outcomes.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCureus
December 2024
Department of Neurosurgery, International University of Health and Welfare Narita Hospital, Narita, JPN.
Infectious intracranial aneurysms (IIAs) are rare lesions with fragile arterial walls located within the aneurysms, carrying a high risk of rupture. Standard management often involves antibiotic therapy and parent artery occlusion; however, the latter carries a significant risk of cerebral infarction. This report presents a case of an unruptured IIA following cerebral infarction, successfully treated with coil embolization while preserving the parent artery.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Am Coll Cardiol
February 2025
Center for Interventional Programs, UCLA Health System, and the UCLA Cardiac Arrhythmia Center & EP Programs David Geffen School of Medicine, Los Angeles, California, USA. Electronic address:
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