Mitral atresia. Morphological details.
Open Access
- 1 March 1984
- Vol. 51 (3) , 252-258
- https://doi.org/10.1136/hrt.51.3.252
Abstract
The morphological characteristics of mitral atresia were studied in 30 hearts to determine the presence or absence of a morphological rudiment of the atretic valve and the relation of this rudiment, if found, to any chamber in the ventricular mass. All the hearts showed atrial situs solitus and no ventricular inversion; consequently all had left atrioventricular atresia. In all instances dense fibrous tissue connected the floor of the left atrium to the left ventricle. This connective tissue is considered to be the morphological rudiment of the atretic mitral valve. In several hearts the intervening fibrous tissue varied from a thick fibrous membrane to a tiny fibrous cord; it is impossible to detect these variations clinically. It is, therefore, more practical to classify those hearts which have a detectable fibrous membrane macroscopically as having an "imperforate membrane" and those with a fibrous strand detectable only microscopically as having an "absent atrioventricular connection."Keywords
This publication has 17 references indexed in Scilit:
- Weasel words in paediatric cardiologyInternational Journal of Cardiology, 1983
- Tricuspid atresia: analysis of coronary artery distribution and ventricular morphology.Heart, 1982
- Left and right ventricular trabecular patterns. Consequence of ventricular septation and valve development.Heart, 1982
- Atresia of left atrioventricular connection. Surgical considerations.Heart, 1982
- Two dimensional echocardiographic categorisation of the univentricular heart. Ventricular morphology, type, and mode of atrioventricular connection.Heart, 1981
- Sequential chamber localization--logical approach to diagnosis in congenital heart disease.Heart, 1976
- Atresia of the Left Atrioventricular Orifice Associated with a Holmes HeartCirculation, 1970
- Mitral atresia: A study of 32 casesAmerican Heart Journal, 1965
- Coexistent mitral and aortic valvular atresia: A pathologic study of 14 casesPublished by Elsevier ,1965
- Congenital atresia of mitral and aortic valves with vestigial left ventricle (three cases)American Heart Journal, 1960