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on August 4, 2008

Circulation. 2008
Published online before print August 4, 2008, doi: 10.1161/CIRCULATIONAHA.107.749440
A more recent version of this article appeared on August 19, 2008
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Submitted on November 20, 2007
Accepted on May 22, 2008

Mitral Leaflet Adaptation to Ventricular Remodeling. Occurrence and Adequacy in Patients With Functional Mitral Regurgitation

Miguel Chaput MD, Mark D. Handschumacher BS, Francois Tournoux MD, Lanqi Hua RDCS, J. Luis Guerrero BS, Gus J. Vlahakes MD, and Robert A. Levine MD*

From the Division of Cardiothoracic Surgery and Cardiac Ultrasound Laboratory, Massachusetts General Hospital, Harvard Medical School, Boston, Mass.

* To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail: rlevine{at}partners.org.

Background—Functional mitral regurgitation (MR) is caused by systolic traction on the mitral leaflets related to ventricular distortion. Little is known about whether chronic tethering causes the mitral leaflet area to adapt to the geometric needs imposed by tethering, in part because of inability to reconstruct leaflet area in vivo. Our aim was to explore whether adaptive increases in leaflet area occur in patients with functional MR compared with normal subjects and to test the hypothesis that leaflet area influences MR severity.

Methods and Results—A new method for 3-dimensional echocardiographic measurement of mitral leaflet area was developed and validated in vivo against 15 sheep heart valves, later excised. This method was then applied in 80 consecutive patients from 3 groups: patients with normal hearts by echocardiography (n=20), patients with functional MR caused by isolated inferior wall-motion abnormality or dilated cardiomyopathy (n=29), and patients with inferior wall-motion abnormality or dilated cardiomyopathy but no MR (n=31). Leaflet area was increased by 35±20% in patients with LV dysfunction compared with normal subjects. The ratio of leaflet to annular area was 1.95±0.40 and was not different among groups, which indicates a surplus leaflet area that adapts to left-heart changes. In contrast, the ratio of total leaflet area to the area required to close the orifice in midsystole was decreased in patients with functional MR compared with those with normal hearts (1.29±0.15 versus 1.78±0.39, P=0.001) and compared with patients with inferior wall-motion abnormality or dilated cardiomyopathy but no MR (1.81±0.38, P=0.001). After adjustment for measures of LV remodeling and tethering, a leaflet-to-closure area ratio <1.7 was associated with significant MR (odds ratio 23.2, 95% confidence interval 2.0 to 49.1, P=0.02).

Conclusions—Mitral leaflet area increases in response to chronic tethering in patients with inferior wall-motion abnormality and dilated cardiomyopathy, but the development of significant MR is associated with insufficient leaflet area relative to that demanded by tethering geometry. The varying adequacy of leaflet adaptation may explain in part the heterogeneity of this disease among patients. The results suggest the need to understand the mechanisms that underlie leaflet adaptation and whether leaflet area can potentially be modified as part of the therapeutic approach.


Key words: regurgitation • heart failure • echocardiography • mitral valve • valves


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