The Billowing Mitral Valve Leaflet
- 1 October 1968
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wolters Kluwer Health in Circulation
- Vol. 38 (4) , 763-770
- https://doi.org/10.1161/01.cir.38.4.763
Abstract
Fourteen patients with billowing mitral valves have been studied. In 11 the abnormality was not accompanied by significant cardiac disability. In three, severe mitral insufficiency required mitral valve replacement. Pathological examination of the excised mitral valves showed myxomatous degeneration of mitral valve substance and chordae tendineae. Inhalation of amyl nitrite by the nine patients with late systolic murmurs resulted in a change from late systolic to pansystolic murmur in seven and to mid-systolic murmur in two. On the basis of the known effects of amyl nitrate, this response gives support to the concept that the critical pathogenetic factor is the degree of elongation of chordae tendineae.Keywords
This publication has 10 references indexed in Scilit:
- The ballooning mitral valve in patients with the “precordial honk” or “whoop”The American Journal of Cardiology, 1967
- Ageing changes in human heart valves.Heart, 1967
- Late systolic murmurs, clicks, and whoops arising from the mitral valveAmerican Heart Journal, 1966
- The syndrome associated with midsystolic click and late systolic murmurThe American Journal of Medicine, 1966
- The late apical systolic murmurThe American Journal of Cardiology, 1966
- Prolapse of the mitral valve: clinical and cine-angiocardiographic findings.Heart, 1966
- Systolic clicks and the late systolic murmur: Intracardiac phonocardiographic evidence of their mitral valve originAmerican Heart Journal, 1965
- Late systolic murmur of mitral regurgitationAmerican Heart Journal, 1964
- The significance of late systolic murmursAmerican Heart Journal, 1963
- THE USE OF AMYL NITRITE IN THE DIAGNOSIS OF SYSTOLIC MURMURSThe Lancet, 1959