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Quantitative determinants of the outcome of asymptomatic mitral regurgitation

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TLDR
Quantitative grading of mitral Regurgitation is a powerful predictor of the clinical outcome of asymptomatic mitral regurgitation and patients with an effective regurgitant orifice of at least 40 mm2 should promptly be considered for cardiac surgery.
Abstract
background The clinical outcome of asymptomatic mitral regurgitation is poorly defined, and the treatment is uncertain. We studied the effect on the outcome of quantifying mitral regurgitation according to recent guidelines. methods We prospectively enrolled 456 patients (mean [±SD] age, 63±14 years; 63 percent men; ejection fraction, 70±8 percent) with asymptomatic organic mitral regurgitation, quantified according to current recommendations (regurgitant volume, 66±40 ml per beat; effective regurgitant orifice, 40±27 mm 2 ). results The estimated five-year rates (±SE) of death from any cause, death from cardiac causes, and cardiac events (death from cardiac causes, heart failure, or new atrial fibrillation) with medical management were 22±3 percent, 14±3 percent, and 33±3 percent, respectively. Independent determinants of survival were increasing age, the presence of diabetes, and increasing effective regurgitant orifice (adjusted risk ratio per 10-mm 2 increment, 1.18; 95 percent confidence interval, 1.06 to 1.30; P<0.01), the predictive power of which superseded all other qualitative and quantitative measures of regurgitation. Patients with an effective regurgitant orifice of at least 40 mm 2 had a five-year survival rate that was lower than expected on the basis of U.S. Census data (58±9 percent vs. 78 percent, P=0.03). As compared with patients with a regurgitant orifice of less than 20 mm 2 , those with an orifice of at least 40 mm 2 had an increased risk of death from any cause (adjusted risk ratio, 2.90; 95 percent confidence interval, 1.33 to 6.32; P<0.01), death from cardiac causes (adjusted risk ratio, 5.21; 95 percent confidence interval, 1.98 to 14.40; P<0.01), and cardiac events (adjusted risk ratio, 5.66; 95 percent confidence interval, 3.07 to 10.56; P<0.01). Cardiac surgery was ultimately performed in 232 patients and was independently associated with improved survival (adjusted risk ratio, 0.28; 95 percent confidence interval, 0.14 to 0.55; P<0.01). conclusions Quantitative grading of mitral regurgitation is a powerful predictor of the clinical outcome of asymptomatic mitral regurgitation. Patients with an effective regurgitant orifice of at least 40 mm 2 should promptly be considered for cardiac surgery.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

An Asymptomatic Patient with Severe Mitral Regurgitation

TL;DR: In primary mitral regurgitation there are anatomic abnormalities of the mitral valve causing backward flow, placing a hemodynamic burden on the left ventricle, which leads to left ventricular damage, heart failure, and death.
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Prosthetic Mitral Valve Thrombosis: A Complication Following Mitral Valve Surgery and Coronary Artery Bypass Graft Surgery

TL;DR: It is suggested that continuing to characterize repairs or replacements of the mitral valve is essential and aggressive and newly emerging procedures, such as percutaneous approaches to mitral valves repair or replacement, may be considered for use to mitigate negative outcomes, especially with an aging population.
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Almanac 2012: Adult cardiac surgery: The national society journals present selected research that has driven recent advances in clinical cardiology Almanaque de 2012: cirurgia cardíaca no adulto. As revistas das sociedades cardiológicas nacionais apresentam investigac ¸ão selecionada que levou a avancos recentes na cardiologia clínica

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors present a review of the important publications in adult cardiac surgery in the last few years, including the current evidence base for surgical revascularization and the use of off-pump surgery, bilateral internal mammary arteries and endoscopic vein harvesting.
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