Mitral regurgitation: Difference between revisions

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** Otherwise
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== Clinical Presentation ==
== Clinical Manifestations ==


=== Physical Examination ===
=== Physical Examination ===

Revision as of 12:17, 19 July 2020

Definition

  • Incompetent mitral valve allowing backflow across the annulus
  • Can be primary, from myxomatous degeneration or senescence, or secondary, from LV dilatation and functional regurgitation

Etiology

  • Inflammatory
    • Rheumatic heart disease
    • Lupus
    • Scleroderma
    • Rheumatoid arthritis
  • Degenerative
    • Myxomatous degeneration (MVP)
    • Marfan syndrome
    • Ehlers-Danlos syndrome
  • Infective endocarditis, after healing
  • Structural
    • Ruptured chordae tendinae (spontaneous, post-MI, MVP, trauma, IE)
    • Ruptured or dysfunctional papillary muscle (MI)
    • Mitral annular dilatation from LV dysfunction (also called secondary MR)
    • Hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (due to systolic anterior motion of the MV; SAM)
    • Paravalvular leak of prosthetic valve
  • Congenital
    • MV cleft or fenestration
    • Parachute mitral valve

Pathophysiology

  • LV compensates by eccentric hypertrophy (increased LV end-diastolic volume)
  • LVEF supra-normal >60%
  • LA dilates to compensate for MR and maintain normal LA pressure

Grading

  • Severe
    • Central jet >40% of LA
    • Holosystolic eccentric jet of MR
    • Vena contracta ≥0.7cm
    • Regurgitant volume ≥60ml
    • Regurgitant fraction ≥50%
    • ERO ≥0.4cm2
    • Other findings: LA enlargement and high RVSP
  • Secondary MR
  • Severe
    • ERO ≥0.2
    • Regurgitant volume ≥30ml
    • Regurgitant fraction ≥50%
  • Progressive
    • Otherwise

Clinical Manifestations

Physical Examination

  • Palpation
    • PMI is prominent and displaced left
    • Systolic expansion of LA may be palpable in RSB
  • Auscultation
    • Soft S1
    • Widely split S2 (A2 occurs early because decreased forward flow over the aortic valve)
    • Holosystolic, blowing, high-pitched murmur at the apex
    • May hear S3

Investigations

  • Consider TEE if severity or mechanism is unclear fro TEE, especially if eccentric jet
  • Consider cardiac MRI if volumes are unclear from TTE
  • Consider exercise echo if discrepancy between severity on TTE and symptoms

Management

  • ACEi, beta blocker, MRA for HFrEF if surgery not planned
  • Don't use vasodilators unless hypertensive
  • Surgery: repair preferred to replacement when possible
    • Symptomatic severe LVEF >30%
    • Asymptomatic severe with LVEF ≤060% or LVESD ≥40mm
    • Undergoing another cardiac surgery
    • Asymptomatic chronic severe with normal LVEF and dimesion in whome likelihood of successful repair iss >95% and expected mortality <1%
    • Asymptomatic severe with new AFib or resting pHTN
  • Secondary MR
    • Treat the LV first per heart failure guidelines
    • Consider CRT (cardiac resynchronization therapy) before valvular intervention
    • Surgery if
      • Undergoing another cardiac surgery like CABG and AVR
      • Consider for severe symptomatic patients