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The varying clinical spectrum of the systolic click-late systolic murmur syndrome.

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TLDR
Structural alterations in the mitral valve complex resulting in systolic prolapse of leaflets into the left atrium occur in these patients and posture related changes in mitral valves function most likely explain the auscultatory phenomena.
Abstract
Striking auscultatory variations with changes in posture were observed in 30 individuals with either mid-late systolic clicks, late systolic murmurs, or both, particularly in the upright position. Twenty-seven patients had late systolic murmurs; in nine, however, the murmur was not heard until assumption of the sitting position. Mid-late systolic clicks were heard in 20 patients while supine and in three only on sitting. Click movement (usually toward the first sound) was common during sitting or standing. Late systolic murmurs became holosystolic in 25 patients. In 20, the murmur did not become holosystolic until standing. Systolic whoops, not heard in the supine position, developed on assumption of the sitting position (three patients) or standing (three patients). With prompt squatting, the auscultatory findings reverted to those heard in the supine position in eight of nine patients. All observations were confirmed with phonocardiograms. Structural alterations in the mitral valve complex resulting in ...

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Journal ArticleDOI

The Variable Spectrum of Echocardiographic Manifestations of the Mitral Valve Prolapse Syndrome

TL;DR: The mitral echographic spectrum of MVPS is comprised of three different abnormal patterns of systolic prolapse: buckling in midsystole, pansYstolic bowing, and pansystolic collapse.
Journal ArticleDOI

Aortic root dilatation and mitral valve prolapse in Marfan's syndrome: an ECHOCARDIOgraphic study.

TL;DR: It appears that cardiac abnormalities are a consistent manifestation of Marfan's Syndrome and that ultrasound is a more sensitive indicator of these abnormalities in such patients than auscultation or phonocardiography.
Journal ArticleDOI

Arrhythmias and left ventricular asynergy in the prolapsing mitral leaflet syndrome.

TL;DR: Twenty-four subjects with the prolapsed mitral leaflet syndrome were studied in detail, with emphasis on arrhythmias and the use of exercise testing for their detection and evaluation, and the sequential motions of the left ventricle during the cardiac cycle.
Journal ArticleDOI

Arrhythmias in patients with mitral valve prolapse.

TL;DR: The peak PVCs/15 min and peak APCs/ 15 min during a 24-hour period of monitoring was found to be an excellent guide to the total number of PVCs and APCs occurring during that period.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

The significance of late systolic murmurs

TL;DR: Although little hemodynamic alteration is present, these patients are presumably potential candidates for subacute bacterial endocarditis, and, in younger patients, prophylaxis against rheumatic activity is indicated.
Journal ArticleDOI

Prolapse of the mitral valve: clinical and cine-angiocardiographic findings.

TL;DR: Correlations of the cine-angiograms with phonocardiograms have provided a functional anatomical basis for the late onset of the murmur as well as the systolic click which was present in 3 of the patients.
Journal ArticleDOI

The syndrome associated with midsystolic click and late systolic murmur.

TL;DR: It is proposed that fibrosed or redundant mitral chordae tendineae due to various congenital or acquired causes, together with organic or biochemical dysfunction of the papillary muscles with repolarization delay, may link together the various features of this syndrome.
Journal ArticleDOI

Ballooning deformity (mucoid degeneration) of atrioventricular valves.

A Pomerance
- 01 May 1969 - 
TL;DR: A type of mitral incompetence associated with a peculiar deformity of the mitral valve that appears identical to the two cases described in 1958 by Fernex and Fernex as mucoid degeneration is reported.
Journal ArticleDOI

The syndrome of apical systolic click, late systolic murmur, and abnormal T waves.

Mary Allen Engle
- 01 Jan 1969 - 
TL;DR: The pharmacological and physiological maneuvers showed that the murmur behaves as does a murmur of mitral regurgitation, and the diagnostic tests which combined to shed light on these findings were selective angiocardiography and phonocardiographic, both extracardiac and intracardiac.
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