Mitral valve prolapse in sickle cell disease. Presumptive evidence for a linked connective tissue disorder
- 1 March 1985
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Medical Association (AMA) in Archives of internal medicine (1960)
- Vol. 145 (3) , 435-438
- https://doi.org/10.1001/archinte.145.3.435
Abstract
To determine the prevalence of mitral valve prolapse in sickle cell disease, M-mode echocardiography was performed on 57 patients with sickle cell disease and 35 patients with chronic anemia of end-stage renal disease (anemic control group). In 25% (14/57) of patients with sickle cell disease, unequivocal mitral valve prolapse was diagnosed by echocardiography; all these patients had a mobile systolic click and/or late systolic murmur. This figure was significantly greater than the reported 5-6% prevalence in the general adult population, the 1-3% prevalence in the black population and the 3.0% prevalence (1/35) in the anemic control group. The association of mitral valve prolapse and sickle cell disease cannot be explained on the basis of left ventricular size, systolic function, ischemic left ventricular or papillary muscle dysfunction, or chronic anemia. A linked connective tissue defect in these 2 diseases is a hypothesis worthy of further investigation.This publication has 4 references indexed in Scilit:
- Sickle cell anemia and SLEThe Journal of Pediatrics, 1980
- The Spectrum of Cardiac Defects in the Ehlers-Danlos Syndrome, Types I and IIIAnnals of Internal Medicine, 1980
- Left ventricular performance during and after sickle cell crisisAmerican Heart Journal, 1979
- Prevalence of Clinical Mitral-Valve Prolapse in 1169 Young WomenNew England Journal of Medicine, 1976