Mitral valve prolapse requiring surgery. Clinical and pathologic study.
American Journal of Medicine 1985 Februrary
The clinical, hemodynamic, surgical, and pathologic findings in 30 patients who required mitral valvular surgery and who had a preoperative diagnosis of mitral valve prolapse were reviewed. The mean age of the patients was 59.5 years; 28 patients were over 45 years of age and 10 were over 60 years. Surprisingly, 20 were males. A long history of systolic murmur was common, whereas symptoms of heart failure were of abrupt onset. At the time of surgery, a local holosystolic murmur typical of mitral regurgitation was present, although a mid- to late systolic click was not heard in any of the patients. Electrocardiographic abnormalities were present in all patients, with 13 patients demonstrating atrial fibrillation. Only four patients had a normal heart size radiographically. Echocardiography confirmed the radiographic findings, in that 27 patients demonstrated left atrial and ventricular enlargement. All 29 patients undergoing cardiac catheterization and angiography demonstrated a prolapsing mitral valve with severe regurgitation. Surgical and pathologic examination revealed findings characteristic of a myxomatous valve in all patients, with 19 also demonstrating ruptured chordae tendineae. This study demonstrates that heart failure requiring valvular surgery occurs in a subset of patients with mitral valve prolapse. In this subset, males predominate and most are over 50 years of age. These patients may be asymptomatic for many years, demonstrating mild to moderate mitral valvular regurgitation, before heart failure develops.
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