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J Am Coll Cardiol, 1989; 13:1053-1061
© 1989 by the American College of Cardiology Foundation
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Temporal resolution of mitral regurgitation in patients with mitral valve prolapse: a phonocardiographic and Doppler echocardiographic study

T Akasaka, J Yoshikawa, K Yoshida, Y Yamaura, and T Hozumi

Department of Cardiology, Kobe General Hospital, Japan.

To assess the timing and duration of mitral regurgitation in mitral valve prolapse, 20 patients with a mid-systolic click or late systolic murmur, or both (Group 1) and 16 patients with a pansystolic murmur with late systolic accentuation (Group 2) were studied with phonocardiography and echocardiography including various Doppler techniques. The subjects' ages ranged from 15 to 73 years. Mitral valve prolapse with mitral regurgitation was observed in 15 of 20 patients in Group 1 and in all 16 patients in Group 2. M-mode Doppler color echocardiography demonstrated a mitral regurgitant signal throughout systole and isovolumic relaxation in all but 1 of these 31 patients regardless of the pattern of the systolic murmur. The regurgitant signal was recorded after the click in only one patient with mitral valve prolapse in Group 1. Two of the five patients in Group 1 without two-dimensional echocardiographic findings of mitral valve prolapse had the early systolic signal of mitral regurgitation. The timing and duration of the mitral regurgitant signal detected in patients in Group 1 with pulsed or continuous wave Doppler ultrasound varied with the site of the sample volume or beam direction. In the patients in Group 2, however, the signal was demonstrated throughout systole and isovolumic relaxation by both Doppler methods. Compared with M-mode Doppler color echocardiography, therefore, pulsed and continuous wave Doppler methods were less sensitive and thus inadequate to investigate the timing and duration of mitral regurgitation in mitral valve prolapse, especially in patients with a mid-systolic click or a late systolic murmur, or both, who had mild or eccentric mitral regurgitant jets.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)


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M. Enriquez-Sarano, L. J. Sinak, A. J. Tajik, K. R. Bailey, and J. B. Seward
Changes in Effective Regurgitant Orifice Throughout Systole in Patients With Mitral Valve Prolapse : A Clinical Study Using the Proximal Isovelocity Surface Area Method
Circulation, November 15, 1995; 92(10): 2951 - 2958.
[Abstract] [Full Text]



 
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