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The Journal of Thoracic and Cardiovascular Surgery, Vol 94, 488-497, Copyright © 1987 by The American Association for Thoracic Surgery and The Western Thoracic Surgical Association
SR Cohen, JE Sell, CL McIntosh and RE Clark
The incidence, preoperative and intraoperative diagnosis, methods, and the
clinical and hemodynamic features of patients with and without tricuspid
regurgitation associated with chronic mitral regurgitation were presented
in Part I. This study (Part II) compares the early and late results in
patients with chronic, pure mitral regurgitation undergoing isolated mitral
valve replacement, mitral replacement and tricuspid valve annuloplasty, and
mitral and tricuspid valve replacement. The mean follow-up interval was 6
years. Those with the longest duration of symptoms (18 years) required
tricuspid and mitral valve replacement (11 patients), whereas those with
the shortest duration (8.1 years) had only mitral replacement (22
patients). Eight patients had minimal tricuspid regurgitation by digital
palpitation, with no procedure performed, and six had tricuspid valve
annuloplasty, only one of whom received a ring support. Operative mortality
rate was similar in all groups (13% to 18%). All but two of the surviving
patients improved by at least one New York Heart Association functional
class, and no statistically significant differences were found between
preoperative and postoperative hemodynamic data. There were no
statistically significant differences in survival at 1, 5, or 8 years (85%,
70%, and 60%, respectively) for patients with or without TR. Only two of
the surviving five patients who underwent tricuspid valve annuloplasty were
alive 3 years after operation, whereas 70% to 80% of those with mitral
replacement or mitral and tricuspid replacement were alive after the same
time interval. It is not clear whether or not the pathogenesis of tricuspid
regurgitation resulting from mitral regurgitation is different from that of
tricuspid regurgitation resulting from mitral stenosis. It is our
contention that whether tricuspid regurgitation arises because of anatomic
destruction of the tricuspid valve or because of right ventricular
dilatation with tricuspid annular enlargement, the underlying mitral valve
lesion may determine the preoperative and postoperative courses of these
patients. Therefore, when tricuspid valve disease is being evaluated, we
urge that patients be categorized by the nature of their underlying mitral
or aortic valve lesions.
ARTICLES
Tricuspid regurgitation in patients with acquired, chronic, pure mitral regurgitation. II. Nonoperative management, tricuspid valve annuloplasty, and tricuspid valve replacement
Department of Surgery, Dartmouth-Hitchock Medical Center, Hanover, N.H.
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