| Literature DB >> 27737905 |
Boyang Liu1, Nicola C Edwards2, Simon Ray3, Richard P Steeds2.
Abstract
Mitral regurgitation (MR) is the second most common form of valvular disease requiring surgery. Correct identification of surgical candidates and optimising the timing of surgery are key in management. For primary MR, this relies upon a balance between the peri-operative risks and rates of successful repair in patients undergoing early surgery when asymptomatic with the potential risk of irreversible left ventricular dysfunction if intervention is performed too late. For secondary MR, recognition that this is a highly dynamic condition where MR severity may change is key, although data on outcomes in determining whether concomitant valve intervention is performed with revascularisation has raised questions regarding timing of surgery. There has been substantial interest in the use of stress echocardiography to risk stratify patients in mitral regurgitation. This article reviews the role of stress echocardiography in both primary and secondary mitral regurgitation and discusses how this can help clinicians tackle the challenges of this prevalent condition.Entities:
Keywords: mitral regurgitation; mitral valve repair; mitral valve replacement; stress echocardiography; timing of surgery
Year: 2016 PMID: 27737905 PMCID: PMC5097142 DOI: 10.1530/ERP-16-0019
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Echo Res Pract ISSN: 2055-0464
Figure 1Colour M-mode demonstrating worsening MR in a patient with normal LVEF. There is an increase in PISA from rest (A) to exercise (B) while cycling at 75 W.
Figure 2Continuous wave Doppler demonstrating an increase in severity of tricuspid regurgitation and increase in maximal velocity from rest (A) to exercise (B) while cycling at 75 W.
Figure 3Example of latent contractile dysfunction with normal LVEF (Video 3), but systolic tissue velocity below 10.5 cm/s at rest.
Figure 4Late gadolinium enhancement of papillary muscle on cardiac MRI (A) and the corresponding cine short axis slice (B) in a patient with primary degenerative MR and normal LVEF.
Standard exercise echocardiography parameters for MR assessment, with key prognostic cut-off values for primary and secondary MR.
| Resting quantitative assessment of disease severity | Resting BP and HR | ||
| EROA | Prospective 456 patients: highest survival with EROA <20 mm2. EROA >40 mm2 increases 5-year mortality rate (risk ratio 2.9) ( | Prospective 303 patients: MR confers a graded inverse relationship with cardiac mortality (RR 1.88) ( | |
| Regurgitant volume | Prospective 456 patients: adjusted mortality risk ratio increases by 1.15 per 10 mL increase in regurgitant volume ( | ||
| Resting TR maximal velocity and calculation for PASP | Prospective 437 patients: resting PASP >50 mmHg is predictor of cardiovascular death (HR 2.21) ( | ||
| LA volume | Prospective 492 patients: LA volume >60 mL/m2 reduces survival (HR 1.3), reversible with surgery ( | ||
| Resting left ventricular assessment | LV internal dimensions/volumes | Class I indications for surgery: LVESD ≥45 mm in ESC or LVESD ≥40 mm in AHA/ACC guidelines ( | |
| Left ventricular ejection fraction | Observational 884 patients: LVEF <55% predicted mortality ( | ||
| Wall motion score | |||
| Inferoseptal and anterolateral s′ and e′ tissue velocity | Retrospective 84 patients: resting systolic tissue velocity <10.5 cm/s predicts post-op reduction in
EF ( | ||
| Global longitudinal strain | Prospective 135 patients: resting
GLS >−20% lowers event-free survival ( | ||
| Exercise parameters | Exercise BP and HR | ||
| Heart rate recovery post-exercise | Observational 884 patients: HRR <18 bpm/min predicts adverse events ( | ||
| Duration and extent of exercise | Observational 884 patients: <100% predicted METs predicts adverse events ( | ||
| Symptoms on exercise | |||
| Quantitative MR severity | Prospective 61 patients: EROA increase of >10 mm2 or regurgitant volume >15 mL predicts symptom onset ( | Prospective 98 patients: EROA during exercise ≥13 mm2 associated with increased cardiac mortality ( | |
| Peak TR maximal velocity and calculation for PASP | Prospective 102 patients: exercise induced PASP >60 mmHg increased risk of post-op events ( | ||
| Peak LVEF | |||
| LVEF | Prospective 71 patients: LVEF fail to improve by ≥4% have poorer prognosis ( | Prospective 159 patients: exercise induced PASP >60 mmHg increased rate of cardiac events (HR 5.9) ( | |
| Global longitudinal strain | Prospective 71 patients: GLS fail to improve by ≥1.9% predicts post-op EF reduction ( |
Figure 5Mitral regurgitation exercise echocardiogram protocol. Reproduced, with permission, from Lancellotti P & Magne J, 2013, Stress echocardiography in regurgitant valve disease, Circulation: Cardiovascular Imaging, volume 6, pages 840–849 (56). Copyright 2013 Wolters Kluwer Health Inc.