Home > Riviste > The Journal of Cardiovascular Surgery > Fascicoli precedenti > The Journal of Cardiovascular Surgery 2019 October;60(5) > The Journal of Cardiovascular Surgery 2019 October;60(5):617-23

ULTIMO FASCICOLO
 

JOURNAL TOOLS

Opzioni di pubblicazione
eTOC
Per abbonarsi
Sottometti un articolo
Segnala alla tua biblioteca
 

ARTICLE TOOLS

Publication history
Estratti
Permessi
Per citare questo articolo
Share

 

ORIGINAL ARTICLE  CARDIAC SECTION 

The Journal of Cardiovascular Surgery 2019 October;60(5):617-23

DOI: 10.23736/S0021-9509.19.10814-2

Copyright © 2019 EDIZIONI MINERVA MEDICA

lingua: Inglese

Structural analysis of the mitral valve in rheumatic and degenerative mitral valve diseases: implications for annuloplasty selection

Yuehuan LI, Haibo ZHANG, Han ZHANG, Tiange LUO, Jiangang WANG, Zhihui ZHU, Jie HAN, Yan LI, Xu MENG

Department of Cardiac Surgery, Beijing Anzhen Hospital, Capital Medical University, Beijing, China



BACKGROUND: Mitral valve (MV) repair has been recommended for MV diseases. Good repair requires a full understanding of the three-dimensional (3D) structure of the MV, however, currently little is known about the 3D structure of the rheumatic MV.
METHODS: A total of 82 cases underwent 3DTEE. Of these, 41 patients with rheumatic valvular disease (RVD) were studied intraoperatively (17 had severe mitral stenosis, 8 had severe mitral regurgitation, 16 had severe mitral stenosis coupled with regurgitation). There were 19 patients with degenerative MV disease (mitral valve prolapse [MVP] with severe regurgitation) and 22 cases with normal MV served as control subjects (CS).
RESULTS: Compared with CS, the anteroposterior diameter, anterolateral posteromedial, annulus circumference, and annulus area of both pathological groups, i.e., the RVD and MVP groups, were understandably greater. Though the sphericity index was greater in the RVD group vis-à-vis CS, the MVP group had nearly the same sphericity index as CS. The mitral annulus of patients with RVD tended to be round. Annular unsaddling, defined as annular height to commissural width ratio (an indicator of saddle degree) less than 15%, was significantly more prevalent in the group with degenerative MV disease. Automatic dynamic analysis revealed that the parameters of annular maximum displacement and annulus area fraction (two-dimensional) were considerably decreased in the RVD group.
CONCLUSIONS: Annular unsaddling was significantly more prevalent in the degenerative MV disease group. The mitral annulus of patients with RVD tended to be round and stiff.


KEY WORDS: Mitral valve; Rheumatic heart disease; Mitral valve prolapse; Echocardiography, transesophageal

inizio pagina