500 resultados para mitral annuloplasty
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Background Latent left ventricular (LV) dysfunction in patients with valvular or myocardial disease may be identified by loss of contractile reserve (CR) at exercise echocardiography. Contraction in the LV longitudinal axis may be more sensitive than radial contraction to minor disturbances of LV function. We sought to determine whether tissue Doppler measurement of longitudinal function could be used to identify CR. Methods Exercise echocardiography was performed in 86 patients (20 women, age 53 +/- 18 years), 72 with asymptomatic or minimally symptomatic mitral regurgitation, and 14 normal controls. Pulsed-wave tissue Doppler imaging (DTI) was used to measure maximum annular systolic velocity at rest and stress. Inducible ischemia was excluded by analysis of wall motion by an experienced observer. CR was defined by greater than or equal to5% improvement of stress compared with rest ejection fraction (EF). Exercise capacity was assessed from expired gas analysis. Results CR was present in 34 patients with mitral regurgitation (47%); peak EF in patients with and without CR was 74% +/- 11% versus 54% +/- 15% (P
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Mestrado em Tecnologia de Diagnóstico e Intervenção Cardiovascular - Ramo de especialização: Ultrassonografia Cardiovascular
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Isolated anterior mitral leaflet cleft (not associated with atrio-ventricular septal defect) is a rare cause of congenital mitral regurgitation, and the treatment consists of direct suturing of the cleft. We present a clinical case with this entity.
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Caseous calcification of the mitral annulus is a rare form of mitral annular calcification, whose etiology is not completely understood and which can lead to an erroneous diagnosis of intracardiac tumor. The authors describe the cases of six patients, five of them female, mean age 74.8 +/- 6.4 years (65-81). Four patients presented with heart failure, two with atrial fibrillation and five with hypertension. Round, echogenic images, 18-26 mm in their largest diameter with a central echolucent area, were identified by transthoracic echocardiography on the lateral and posterior segments of the mitral annulus. Severe mitral regurgitation was also found in four patients. Only three patients with severe mitral regurgitation and heart failure were operated on, and one patient refused surgical treatment. A caseous mass, similar to toothpaste, was obtained from the mitral annulus zone during surgery.
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BACKGROUND: Valve surgery in children is aimed at restoring correct hemodynamics with few reoperations and limited resort to prostheses, which would imply early deterioration or definitive hypocoagulation. OBJECTIVES: Report a series of paediatric pts with acquired mitral valve disease, mostly due to rheumatic disease, in whom it was possible, for the great majority, to repair the damaged valve. DEMOGRAPHICS: Fifty children with predominant mitral valve disease, 47 rheumatic (94%) and 3 after endocarditis were consequently operated by the same surgical team over the last five years. Ages were 12.5+/-3.1 yrs and weights 33.2+/-8.4 Kg, 30 pts presented with predominant mitral regurgitation and 20 pts had significant stenosis. In 8 pts there also moderate to severe aortic regurgitation and in 2 pts severe tricuspid regurgitation was present. Patients were not operated during the acute phase of the disease. Five pts were reoperations and from those, all but one received mechanical prosthesis. RESULTS: In all operations the intention was to repair the mitral valve. In 46 pts complex mitral valvuloplasties were performed extended comissurotomies, shortening of chordae, chordal replacement with PTFE, and reconstruction of valve leaflefts by direct patching or pericardial extension of the retracted posterior leaflet (78.2% cases), plus reshaping of the annulus by using a fixed prosthetic CE ring (sizes 26 to 32) in every case. Ring sizes correlated poorly with body weights, but correlation was close and positive for the use of pericardial advancement of the posterior leaflet (p<0.01). There was no operative mortality, but one pt died early from sepsis and there was no late mortality. Maximum follow up extends now to 50 months (median 28 months) and functional evaluation, at latest follow up, as assessed by Doppler Echocardiography, showed residual mitral regurgitation, mild-moderate in 4 pts and LA-LV gradients mild in 5 and moderate in 2 pts. NYHA functional class, at present follow-up is class I for 43 pts (88%) and class II in the remaining 6 pts. Along the follow-up period 2 pts had to be reoperated for early repair failures and other three for late failures, presently freedom for reoperation is 91.8% at 5 years. CONCLUSIONS: Mitral valve repair in children with rheumatic lesions can be achieved for the great majority of cases by using different techniques. Pericardial extension of the retracted posterior leaflet allowed the use of a bigger size prosthetic ring. Intermediate functional results are good with fair functional classes and few reoperations but follow-up is short and does not allow us to draw conclusions about the long-term results of the repair in these rheumatic patients.
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A Nocardia é responsável por diversos tipos de infecção quer em receptores imunocompetentes, quer imunocomprometidos e pode afectar qualquer órgão. A endocardite a Nocardia spp é muito rara e tem mau prognóstico. Segundo o nosso conhecimento e após revisão da literatura, foram reportados apenas 12 casos de endocardite a Nocardia, a maioria tratada com substituição valvular. Reportamos o primeiro caso descrito em Portugal de endocardite protésica a Nocardia, tratado com sucesso apenas com terapêutica antimicrobiana (trimetoprimsulfametoxazol), sem necessidade de substituição valvular.
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Primary tumours of the heart are uncommon entities, cardiac myxomas being the most frequent. However, mitral valve myxomas are exceptionally rare. In the last 12 years, there have been 25 myxomas diagnosed at our institution, with only two of them originating from the mitral valve. Both patients were female, the first, 25, and the second, 72 years old. The younger patient was very symptomatic with a large mass, 4 cm long, which involved both leaflets causing significant obstruction to the left ventricular inflow. The second one had a smaller mass located at the atrial side of the posterior leaflet that only produced some flow divergence. Neither of them had constitutional nor embolic symptoms. Both patients were submitted to emergent surgical resection that in the first case involved the mitral valve and replacement with mechanical prosthesis. The macroscopic appearance of these tumours suggested a malignant aetiology which may represent somewhat different features of the myxomas when originating from the cardiac valves. Both patients are well reflecting the good prognosis of this illness after resection, although the younger patient was re-operated because of prosthetic valve obstruction and suspicion of recurrence that was not confirmed. Because of the illustrative images and different presentations, we found it interesting to report and discuss them together.
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INTRODUCTION: Pregnant women with mechanical prosthetic heart valves are at increased risk for valve thrombosis. Management decisions for this life-threatening complication are complex. Open-heart surgery has a very high risk of maternal mortality and fetal loss. Bleeding and embolic risks associated with thrombolytic agents, the limited efficacy of thrombolysis in certain subgroups, and a lack of experience in the setting of pregnancy raise important concerns. CASE REPORT: We report a case of mitral prosthetic valve thrombosis in early pregnancy, which was successfully treated with streptokinase. Ten years later, the same patient had an uneventful pregnancy, throughout which acenocoumarol was maintained. CONCLUSION: With this case we review the prevention (with oral anticoagulant therapy) and treatment of prosthetic valve thrombosis during pregnancy, which is important for both obstetrician and cardiologist.
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INTRODUCTION: Mitral regurgitation (MR) is the most common valvular disease and has recently become the target of a number of percutaneous approaches. The MitraClip is virtually the only device for which there is considerable experience, with more than 20,000 procedures performed worldwide. OBJECTIVE: To describe our initial experience of the percutaneous treatment of MR with the MitraClip device. METHODS: We describe the first six MitraClip cases performed in this institution (mean age 58.5 ± 13.1 years), with functional MR grade 4+ and New York Heart Association (NYHA) heart failure class III or IV (n=3), with a mean follow-up of 290 ± 145 days. RESULTS: Procedural success (MR ≤ 2+) was 100%. Total procedure time was 115.8 ± 23.7 min, with no in-hospital adverse events and discharge between the fourth and eighth day, and consistent improvement in the six-minute walk test (329.8 ± 98.42 vs. 385.33 ± 106.95 m) and in NYHA class (three patients improved by two NYHA classes). During follow-up there were two deaths, in two of the four patients who had been initially considered for heart transplantation. CONCLUSION: In patients with functional MR the MitraClip procedure is safe, with both a high implantation and immediate in-hospital success rate. A longer follow-up suggests that the clinical benefit decreases or disappears completely in patients with more advanced heart disease, namely those denied transplantation or on the heart transplant waiting list.
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PURPOSE: The dura mater bioprosthesis was developed in the Department of Cardiopneumology of the Hospital das Clínicas of the University of São Paulo Medical School in 1971. Here, we present the clinical results of the dura mater bioprosthesis over 30 years of follow-up. METHODS: We studied 70 consecutive patients who underwent mitral or tricuspid valve replacement with a dura mater bioprosthesis between January 1971 and August 1972. RESULTS: The early mortality was 10% (7 patients). The follow-up was 87% complete (9 patients were lost to follow-up). Two patients were alive and asymptomatic 30 years after valve replacement; 33 patients underwent reoperations due to valve dysfunction, and 19 died during the follow-up period. At 30 years, the actuarial survival was 49.2 ± 8.6%; freedom from rupture, 27.0 ± 10.2%; freedom from calcification, 78.8 ± 8.6%; and freedom from reoperation, 18.8 ± 7.5%. CONCLUSIONS: The dura mater bioprosthesis played an important role in the treatment of patients with mitral and tricuspid valve disease. The low rate of thromboembolism and the long period of follow-up without evidence of valve dysfunction, which occurred for several of our patients, are important characteristics of these bioprosthesis.
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Gestante com 33 anos na 28ª semana e sinais de óbito fetal foi admitida em caráter de urgência com quadro de edema pulmonar agudo secundário à estenose mitral grave. Com o insucesso do tratamento medicamentoso intensivo, a paciente foi submetida à valvoplastia mitral percutânea de emergência com melhora imediata. O agravamento subseqüente do quadro, atribuído ao óbito fetal, foi tratado através parto cesáreo com melhora clínica considerável. A paciente teve alta hospitalar no 10º dia, e 11 meses após o procedimento, encontra-se em classe funcional I, sem uso de medicação e com sinais ecocardiográficos de estenose mitral leve (área valvar: 2,0 cm²).
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OBJETIVO: Estudar o arranjo espacial dos elementos fibrosos que constituem os folhetos da valva mitral e do seu anel fibroso. MÉTODOS: Foram utilizados 20 corações adultos, de ambos os sexos, fixados em formol a 10%. Isolaram-se a valva mitral, juntamente com o anel fibroso, e uma pequena quantidade de tecido muscular ao seu redor. Parte desse material foi incluído em parafina, submetido a cortes seriados de 40µm de espessura e corados pelo tricrômio de Azan e pela resorcina-fucsina, e o restante das peças dissecadas sob lupa estereoscópica, com ajuda de delicadas pinças e agulhas, para se observar a disposição dos feixes miocárdicos ao nível do anel mitral. RESULTADOS: Observou-se que o anel fibroso mitral era constituído por feixes colágenos de trajetória semicircular, envolvendo de forma incompleta o óstio atrioventricular, uma vez que era ausente na região ântero-medial do óstio. Verificou-se que os feixes miocárdicos ventriculares inseriam-se de forma oblíqua, na borda externa do anel, sendo que na região ântero-medial assumiam uma trajetória semicircular. Os folhetos da valva mitral eram constituídos de feixes colágenos dispostos, paralelamente, no sentido do maior eixo da válvula, recobertos pelo endocárdio atrial e ventricular. Os feixes colágenos, presentes na base dos folhetos valvares, praticamente se continuavam com os do anel fibroso. Observou-se, em alguns casos, a existência de delgados feixes miocárdios atriais no folheto valvar anterior, que praticamente eram restritos à região central das válvulas. CONCLUSÃO: Os folhetos da valva mitral e seu anel fibroso possuem uma continuidade estrutural, que demonstra que estes elementos funcionam de forma integrada no fechamento do óstio atrioventricular esquerdo durante a sístole ventricular, no que seria auxiliado pela redução do diâmetro do anel fibroso, através da contração dos feixes miocárdicos semicirculares que nele se inserem.
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OBJETIVO: Avaliação não invasiva das respostas cardiopulmonares ao exercício a curto e longo prazo após valvotomia mitral por cateter balão. MÉTODOS: Estudaram-se 9 pacientes do sexo feminino, 35±9 anos, com estenose mitral, tipo funcional II ou III, em uso de digitálicos e diuréticos, através de teste ergoespirométrico, eletrocardiograma e ecocardiograma, antes e após valvotomia em fase precoce (3 a 5 dias) e tardia (8 a 12 meses). RESULTADOS: Os pacientes evoluíram para tipo funcional II (44%) ou I (56%), na fase tardia. Houve redução da freqüência cardíaca de repouso (87±11bpm vs 85±7bpm vs 75±9bpm) e elevação do número de estágios (4±1 estágios vs 5±2 estágios vs 6±1 estágios); a capacidade aeróbia máxima aumentou apenas na fase tardia (16±3mL/kg/min vs 18±4mL/kg/min vs 22±7mL/kg/min). O limiar anaeróbio, a ventilação pulmonar e o equivalente ventilatório do O2 permaneceram inalterados. Nas cargas submáximas de exercício ocorreu redução da freqüência cardíaca (estágio I: 124±18bpm vs 112±13bpm vs 87±15bpm), consumo de O2 (estágio I: 10±2mL/kg/min vs 8±2mL/kg/min vs 8±mL/kg/min) e ventilação pulmonar, nas fases precoce e tardia. A área valvar mitral mostrou reduções na fase tardia (0,94cm² vs 1,66cm² vs 1,20cm² ). CONCLUSÃO: Apesar da tendência à reestenose parcial, houve melhora no tipo funcional e no desempenho cardiopulmonar com diminuição da sobrecarga circulatória no exercício submáximo.
Avaliação comparativa entre valvoplastia percutânea e comissurotomia a céu aberto na estenose mitral
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OBJETIVO: Comparar resultados imediatos e após 12 meses de seguimento entre valvoplastia por balão e comissurotomia na estenose mitral. MÉTODOS: Oitenta e oito portadores de estenose mitral sintomáticos com anatomia favorável foram randomizados nos dois grupos. Todos os pacientes submeteram-se a avaliação clínica e Doppler ecocardiográfica antes, imediatamente após e 12 meses depois do procedimento. RESULTADOS: Gradiente médio mitral (mmHg) diminuiu (p<0,001) de 12,18±5,84 para 5,80±2,66 no grupo comissurotomia (GC) e de 11,66±6,13 para 4,98±2,40 (p<0,001) no grupo valvuloplastia (GV). Área valvar mitral (cm²) aumentou de 0,98±0,21 para 2,52±0,46 no GC e de 1,05±0,25 para 2,18±0,40 no GV (p<0,001). Em ambos os grupos ocorreu uma diminuição discreta na área valvar mitral ao final do acompanhamento. Não ocorreram óbitos. Um paciente do GV apresentou insuficiência mitral significativa e necessitou tratamento cirúrgico. Aos 12 meses de acompanhamento todos os pacientes do GC e 97,7% dos pacientes do GV estavam em classe funcional I ou II (NYHA). CONCLUSÃO: Os procedimentos foram seguros e mostraram melhora semelhante no gradiente mitral e classe funcional. A área valvar mitral aumentou expressivamente mais no GC, e apresentou, também, uma redução mais significativa após 12 meses. A maioria dos pacientes não alterou a classe funcional no acompanhamento.