Literature DB >> 7457411

Left ventricular function in mitral valve prolapse: assessment with radionuclide cineangiography.

J S Gottdiener, J S Borer, S L Bacharach, M V Green, S E Epstein.   

Abstract

Abnormalities of left ventricular contraction in patients with mitral valve prolapse have suggested a myocardial factor in this disease. To determine systolic left ventricular function in mitral valve prolapse, technetium-99m gated equilibrium radionuclide cineangiography was performed in 47 patients with this diagnosis. In 39 patients without mitral regurgitation the average ejection fraction was normal at rest (average [+/- standard error of the mean] 57 +/- 3 percent, normal 57 +/- 1 percent, difference not significant) and exceeded the lower limits of normal in all but 1 patient, whose ejection fraction was 41 percent. However, ejection fraction during maximal exercise was lower for the group of patients with mitral prolapse without mitral regurgitation than for normal subjects (average 64 +/- 2 percent, normal 71 +/- 2 percent, p < 0.005). In eight patients with mitral prolapse and mitral regurgitation, the average ejection fraction was normal at rest but was diminished with exercise in comparison with both normal subjects and patients with mitral valve prolapse without mitral regurgitation. Chest pain, arrhythmia and the pattern or extent of mitral valve prolapse on echocardiography were not independently associated with impaired left ventricular functional reserve. We conclude that, although many patients with mitral valve prolapse have normal left ventricular function, there is a subgroup without mitral regurgitation in whom diminished left ventricular functional reserve is suggestive of a cardiomyopathic process.

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Year:  1981        PMID: 7457411     DOI: 10.1016/0002-9149(81)90282-4

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Am J Cardiol        ISSN: 0002-9149            Impact factor:   2.778


  1 in total

1.  Recovery of the Frank-Starling mechanism by coenzyme Q10 in patients with load-induced contractility depression.

Authors:  T Oda
Journal:  Clin Investig       Date:  1993
  1 in total

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