2. Mitral Valve Anatomy
1. Leaflets
2. Annulus
3. Subvalvular apparatus:
a. Papillary muscles- PM, AL
b. Chordae tendiae
3.
4.
5. Mitral Stenosis etiology
1. Rheumatic: most common cause
2. Severe mitral annular calcification (MAC)
3. Congenital
Parachute mitral valve: single papillary muscle to which chordae to
both leaflets attach;results in mitral stenosis or mitral regurgitation
Supravalvular mitral ring
4. Systemic diseases: can cause valvular fibrosis
Carcinoid
SLE
RA
Healed endocarditis
6. Rheumatic MS
The main mechanism of rheumatic MS is
commissural fusion.
Other anatomic lesions are chordal shortening
and fusion, and leaflet thickening, and later in
the disease course, superimposed
calcification, which may contribute to the
restriction of leaflet motion
7. Degenerative MS
The main lesion is annular calcification. It is
frequently observed in the elderly and
associated with HTN, atherosclerotic disease,
and sometimes AS.
This is required to cause restriction of leaflet
motion since there is no commissural fusion.
Valve thickening or calcification predominates at
the base of the leaflets whereas it affects
predominantly the tips in rheumatic MS
8. Systemic MS
Mainly the consequence of abnormalities of the
subvalvular apparatus.
Leaflet thickening and restriction are common
here, while commissures are rarely fused.
Congenital MS
9. Methods of echo assessment of MS
1. 2D, M and doppler mode echo
2. 3 D echo
3. Transesophageal echo
4. Stress echo
10. M mode, 2D and Doppler study
1. Initial diagnosis
2. Determination of severity
3. Evaluation of suitability for PTMC
4. Identification of concomitant Valve lesions
12. M mode
1. Dense echo on MV
2. Decreased D-E excursion
3. Poor leaflet seperation
4. Anterior motion of posterior leaflet
5. Decreased E-F slope
13.
14. 2 Dimensional (Initial Assessment)
• Restricted motion and diastolic motion of
leaflets ( hockey stick sign)
• Thickening and calcification of leaflets and
chordae
21. Caution:
1. Gradient is influenced by HR, cardiac output,
MR, VSD
2. In patients with atrial fibrillation, mean
gradient should be calculated as the average
of five cycles with the least variation of R–R
intervals and as close as possible to normal
heart rate
22. Measuring valve area
1. MVA Planimetry (Level 1 Recommendation).
planimetry is considered as the reference
measurement of MVA
• Careful scanning from the apex to the base of
the LV PSAX view at the level of mitral valveis
required to ensure that the CSA is measured
at the leaflet tips
23. • Gain setting should be just sufficient to
visualize the whole contour of the mitral
orifice. Excessive gain setting may cause
underestimation of valve area, in particular
when leaflet tips are dense or calcified.
• Image magnification, using the zoom mode, is
useful to better delineate the contour of the
mitral orifice.
24. • The optimal timing of the cardiac cycle to
measure planimetry is mid-diastole. This is best
performed using the cineloop mode on a frozen
image.
• Recent reports suggested that real-time 3D echo
and 3D-guided biplane imaging is useful in
optimizing the positioning of the measurement
plane and, therefore, improving reproducibility
25. • In the particular case of degenerative MS,
planimetry is difficult and mostly not reliable
because of the orifice geometry and
calcification present
26.
27.
28.
29.
30. Measuring valve area
2. Pressure half-time (Level 1 Recommendation)
• MVA 220 ⁄ T½ or 750/DT
T1/2 is obtained by tracing the deceleration slope
of the E-wave on Doppler spectral display of
transmitral flow and valve area is automatically
calculated by the integrated software of currently
used echo machines
PHT = 29% of total deceleration time (DT)
31.
32.
33. • In patients with atrial fibrillation, tracing
should avoid mitral flow from short diastoles
and average different cardiac cycles.
• the use of T1/2 in degenerative calcific MS
may be unreliable and should be avoided.
• Impaired LV diastolic function is a likely
explanation of the lower reliability of T1/2 to
assess MVA in the elderly.
34.
35. Measuring valve area
3. Continuity equation (Level 2
Recommendation)
• The continuity equation cannot be used in
cases of atrial fibrillation or associated
significant MR or AR.
4. Proximal isovelocity surface area or PISA
method (Level 2 Recommendation)
36. Measuring PASP pressure
• Calculation of TR in A4CV
• RA pressure in subcostal view
PASP = 4 (max TR velocity)² + RA pressure
RA pressure:
IVC ≥2.1 cm with resp. variation > 50% = 0-5mmHg
IVC >2.1 cm with resp. variation <50% = 10-20 mmHg
Does not fit in any category = 5-10 mmHg
37. Evaluation of suitability for PTMC
• Several scoring system. e.g., Wilkins score,
Cormier score
• Wilkins score less than 8 predicts successful
PTMC
• No score is accurate
38.
39.
40. Identification of concomitant lesions.
• The quantitation of left atrial enlargement
favours 2D echocardiography enabling left atrial
area or volume to be evaluated.
• Left atrial spontaneous contrast as assessed by
TEE is a better predictor of the thromboembolic
risk than left atrial size.
• Associated MR has important implications for the
choice of intervention
• mediate severity since more than mild
regurgitation is a relative contraindication for
balloon mitral commissurotomy
41. • Other valve diseases are frequently associated
with rheumatic MS. The severity of AS may be
underestimated because decreased SV due to MS
reduces aortic gradient, thereby highlighting the
need for the estimation of AVA. In cases of severe
AR, the T1/2 method for assessment of MS is not
valid. The analysis of the tricuspid valve should
look for signs of involvement of the rheumatic
process. More frequently, associated tricuspid
disease is functional tricuspid regurgitation (TR).
42.
43.
44.
45.
46. Stress echocardiography (Level 2
Recommendation)
• Exercise echocardiography enables mean
mitral gradient and systolic pulmonary artery
pressure to be assessed during effort.
• Exercise echocardiography is useful in patients
whose symptoms are equivocal or discordant
with the severity of MS
47. Transoesophageal echocardiography
Recommended only when the transthoracic
approach is of poor quality, or to detect left
atrial thrombosis before balloon mitral
commissurotomy or following a
thromboembolic event.