Mitral Valve

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Revision as of 21:49, 7 February 2014 by Nilofer (talk | contribs) (→‎Anatomy)
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Anatomy

The mitral valve consists of two valve leaflets , the anterior blade (A) and the rear blade (P) , which together have a total of 4 - 6cm2. At the edges are chordae tendinae, which ensure that the leaflets do not tip (prolapse). These attach to two major papillary cusps that are part of the muscle of the left ventricle.

Mvalv.png
Top view of the normal heart showing the coronary arteries and four valves including the mitral valve[1]

The mitral valve is bringing many scan faces in pictures: Plax, PSAXmv, AP4Ch, AP5Ch, AP2Ch, AP3Ch and subcostaal4Ch. A prolapse of the MV is assessed on Plax . But mitral valvular insufficiency should be considered in all views. When significant abnormalities of the mitral 3D TEE can assist in assessing the severity .

Video
3D (TEE) view of MV with a chorda rupture

 

Examples of Mitral variants (AP4Ch)
Video Video
Normal Degenerative
Video Video
Prolapse Rheumatic

 

The scallops of the mitral valve

The two leaflets are divided into a total of six scallops: A1, A2, A3 (anterior), P1, P2, P3 (posterior).

MV AP2CH.jpg MV PLAX.jpg MV PSAX.jpg
MV AP2CH MV PSAX MV Surgical view
MV AP4CH.jpg MV surgical view.jpg MVtee.jpg
MV AP4CH MV PLAX MV TEE views (Fig. click for animation)
Source image: Mechanisms of Mitral regugitation - role of 3D ultrasound illustrated by case studies - ML Geleijnse.[2]

Stenosis

Causes of mitral valve stenosis
Acquired
  • Degeneracy
  • Rheumatic fever
Space occupying lesion
  • Myxoma
Congenital
  • Parachute valve
  • Cor triatriatum

Effects of mitral valve stenosis:

Chest pain, of breath when lying flat, with exertion and attacks during the night or morning (cardiac asthma), possibly coughing up blood; any complaints from right valve failure, such as ankle edema. Palpitations by atrial fibrillation, which can cause embolism, such as a stroke.

Treatment

The valve can be opened by balloon angioplasty or surgically treated by valve replacement.

Click here for mitral stenosis quantification.

Insufficiency

Causes of mitral valvular insufficiency
Annulus dilatation
  • Atrial fibrillation
  • Left ventricular dilatation
  • Left Atrium dilatation
degeneracy
  • Malcoaptation at mitral valve stenosis
Acquired valve defect
  • Billowing
  • Prolapse
  • Floppy valve
  • Flail
  • Chordal rupture
  • Papillary muscle rupture
Secondary
  • Arrhythmias (LBBB-->diastolic MI)
  • SAM in HCM

Mitral valvular insufficiency (MI ) may result in decompensation on the left side. An MI results in back flow of blood from the left ventricle into the left atrium. This may eventually result in pulmonary hypertension and pulmonary edema. Pulmonary edema is manifested by shortness of breath, initially with exertion, but later at rest, orthopnea and nocturnal dyspnea attacks. On physical examination, pulmonary edema can be detected by fine crackles with particular dorsobasale lung fields.

A complication that may be the left atrium increases, the electrical stimulation that is chaotic, with as a result of atrial fibrillation.

Click here for quantification mitral valvular insufficiency .

References

  1. How the heart works from Geisinger’s Health Library.

    [1]
  2. [2]