Mitral Insufficiency Due to Ruptured Chordae Tendineae Simulating Aortic Stenosis
- 6 August 1959
- journal article
- Published by Massachusetts Medical Society in New England Journal of Medicine
- Vol. 261 (6) , 272-276
- https://doi.org/10.1056/nejm195908062610604
Abstract
THE case reported below illustrates two interesting and unusual phenomena. The first is the production of the physical signs and phonocardiographic evidence of aortic stenosis in a patient with mitral insufficiency but without disease of the aortic valve. A similar case has recently been reported but without phonocardiographic confirmation.1 The second is the production of mitral insufficiency by rupture of un-diseased chordae tendineae attached to a normal valve leaflet, in the absence of a history of direct chest trauma.Case ReportA 39-year-old man entered the San Francisco Veterans Administration Hospital on July 31, 1958, because of increasing signs and . . .Keywords
This publication has 4 references indexed in Scilit:
- Endocardial and Intimal Lesions (Jet Impact) as Possible Sites of Origin of MurmursCirculation, 1958
- Mitral regurgitation due to ruptured chordae tendineae correction by “mitral purse-string”American Heart Journal, 1957
- Rupture of mitral chordae tendineaeAmerican Heart Journal, 1944
- Rupture of normal chordae tendineae of the mitral valveAmerican Heart Journal, 1934