Mitral Stenosis: A Review

Mitral stenosis due to rheumatic heart disease is not common in the United States but is common in the developing world because rheumatic fever is still occurring frequently. Symptoms usually gradually occur in the young adult (most commonly female). Atrial fibrillation is a common accompanying rhyt...

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Main Author: By C. Richard Conti, MD, MACC
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Compuscript 2018-01-01
Series:Cardiovascular Innovations and Applications
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.ingentaconnect.com/content/cscript/cvia/2018/00000002/00000004/art00010
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spelling doaj-0f0b7ac5291643668073ea6efe6ca4bd2020-11-24T23:55:31ZengCompuscriptCardiovascular Innovations and Applications2009-86182009-87822018-01-012445946510.15212/CVIA.2016.0041Mitral Stenosis: A ReviewBy C. Richard Conti, MD, MACC0Department of Medicine, University of Florida, Gainseville, FL, USAMitral stenosis due to rheumatic heart disease is not common in the United States but is common in the developing world because rheumatic fever is still occurring frequently. Symptoms usually gradually occur in the young adult (most commonly female). Atrial fibrillation is a common accompanying rhythm in patients with proven mitral stenosis. The main physiologic event is a pressure gradient between the left atrium and the left ventricle. Diagnosis is relatively straight forward using physical exam and simple laboratory studies such as Chest X-Ray (elevated Left main stem bronchus, Double Density indicating enlarged left atrium) and ECG (P-Mitrale). Cardiac ultrasound confirms the clinical diagnosis (Doming of mitral valve in diastole, Hockey stick deformity of the anterior mitral valve leaflet, large left atrium, Doppler estimation of valve gradient). Mitral commisurotomy (surgical or Balloon) is warranted if the valve is pliable and not heavily calcified.http://www.ingentaconnect.com/content/cscript/cvia/2018/00000002/00000004/art00010rheumatic fevermitral annular calcificationcardiac outputcardiac ultrasound
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author By C. Richard Conti, MD, MACC
spellingShingle By C. Richard Conti, MD, MACC
Mitral Stenosis: A Review
Cardiovascular Innovations and Applications
rheumatic fever
mitral annular calcification
cardiac output
cardiac ultrasound
author_facet By C. Richard Conti, MD, MACC
author_sort By C. Richard Conti, MD, MACC
title Mitral Stenosis: A Review
title_short Mitral Stenosis: A Review
title_full Mitral Stenosis: A Review
title_fullStr Mitral Stenosis: A Review
title_full_unstemmed Mitral Stenosis: A Review
title_sort mitral stenosis: a review
publisher Compuscript
series Cardiovascular Innovations and Applications
issn 2009-8618
2009-8782
publishDate 2018-01-01
description Mitral stenosis due to rheumatic heart disease is not common in the United States but is common in the developing world because rheumatic fever is still occurring frequently. Symptoms usually gradually occur in the young adult (most commonly female). Atrial fibrillation is a common accompanying rhythm in patients with proven mitral stenosis. The main physiologic event is a pressure gradient between the left atrium and the left ventricle. Diagnosis is relatively straight forward using physical exam and simple laboratory studies such as Chest X-Ray (elevated Left main stem bronchus, Double Density indicating enlarged left atrium) and ECG (P-Mitrale). Cardiac ultrasound confirms the clinical diagnosis (Doming of mitral valve in diastole, Hockey stick deformity of the anterior mitral valve leaflet, large left atrium, Doppler estimation of valve gradient). Mitral commisurotomy (surgical or Balloon) is warranted if the valve is pliable and not heavily calcified.
topic rheumatic fever
mitral annular calcification
cardiac output
cardiac ultrasound
url http://www.ingentaconnect.com/content/cscript/cvia/2018/00000002/00000004/art00010
work_keys_str_mv AT bycrichardcontimdmacc mitralstenosisareview
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