Background And Aims Of The Study: Preservation of chordae tendineae helps maintain ventricular performance in patients having surgery for mitral regurgitation. The importance of chordal integrity in patients with rheumatic mitral stenosis is unknown. The purpose of this study was to determine the influence of chordal preservation on left ventricular function following relief of rheumatic mitral stenosis.

Methods: A total of 142 patients with mitral stenosis had balloon valvulotomy (group 1, n = 63), surgical commissurotomy (group 2, n = 33) or mitral valve replacement (group 3, n = 46). Chordae were resected in all group 3 patients. Left ventricular dimension in end-diastole (LVEDD), end-systole (LVESD) and fractional shortening (FS) were measured at baseline and at a mean interval of 11 +/- months post intervention.

Results: At one year, FS increased in groups 1 and 2, but decreased in group 3 (+11.5%, +9%, -6.1%, p < 0.005 for group 3 versus groups 1 and 2). a borderline significant increase LVEDD was seen in group 1 compared with groups 2 and 3 (11%, 5%, 4% respectively, p = 0.05). Differences in FS at follow up were due mainly to diametrically opposite changes in LVESD in the subgroup of patients with baseline left ventricular dysfunction (-1.9%, 0%, +9.8%, p < 0.005 for group 3 versus groups 1 and 2).

Conclusions: Deterioration of left ventricular function only in patients having mitral valve replacement indicates chordal resection as a putative mechanism. The result of this study suggest that chordal preservation is particularly important in patients with mitral stenosis who have depressed preoperative left ventricular systolic function.

Download full-text PDF

Source

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

left ventricular
24
mitral valve
12
valve replacement
12
mitral stenosis
12
patients mitral
12
preoperative left
8
ventricular systolic
8
mitral
8
rheumatic mitral
8
chordal preservation
8

Similar Publications

Data on outcomes of extracorporeal membrane oxygenation (ECMO) are limited in patients with pulmonary atresia intact ventricular septum (PAIVS). The objective of this study was to describe the use of ECMO and the associated outcomes in patients with PAIVS. We retrospectively reviewed neonates with PAIVS who received ECMO between 2009 and 2019 in 19 US hospitals affiliated with the Collaborative Research for the Pediatric Cardiac Intensive Care Society (CoRe-PCICS).

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Aims: A cardiovascular magnetic resonance (CMR) approach to non-invasively estimate left ventricular (LV) filling pressure was recently developed and shown to correlate with invasively measured pulmonary capillary wedge pressure (PCWP). We examined the association between CMR-estimated PCWP (CMR-PCWP) and other imaging and biomarker measures of congestion, and the effect of empagliflozin on these, in the SUGAR-DM-HF trial (NCT03485092).

Methods And Results: SUGAR-DM-HF enrolled 105 patients with heart failure with reduced ejection fraction (HFrEF) and pre-diabetes or type 2 diabetes who were randomly assigned to empagliflozin 10 mg or placebo once daily for 36 weeks.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Physical activity improves myocardial structure, function and resilience via complex, incompletely defined mechanisms. We explored effects of 1-2 wks swim training on cardiac and systemic phenotype in young male C57Bl/6 mice. Two wks forced swimming (90 min twice daily) resulted in cardiac hypertrophy (22% increase in heart:body weight, P<0.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!