Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
Published bySuparman Wibowo Modified over 6 years ago
1
Ανεπάρκεια Μιτροειδούς : Σταυρόλεξο για δυνατούς λύτες Ποσοτικοποίηση με Ηχωκαρδιογράφημα και ο ρόλος των δοκιμασιών φόρτισης Μαρία Μπόνου Διευθύντρια, ΓΝΑ Λαϊκό
2
¨Δεν υπάρχει σύγκρουση συμφερόντων¨
3
Mitral Regurgitation MR results in significant morbidity and mortality. Severe primary MR warrants mitral valve surgery which improves prognosis. Yet, the timing of surgery in asymptomatic patients remains controversial.
4
Optimal timing for surgery - Severe MR the “Golden Moment”
Very well Hyperdynamic, dilating LV Ventricular Reverse Time (yrs) Disease Progression T=0 T=5yrs (?+) Reliable assessment of MR severity is of crucial importance to guide clinical management “Normal EF”, dilated LV Very bad Reversible LV Dysfunction • Poor EF, dilated LV Irreversible LV Dysfunction Too Early Too Late
5
Mitral Regurgitation grading
Mitral valve pathology LV/LA size Color Doppler Vena contracta, Jet area, Flow convergence Mitral E, Pulmonary vein pattern Regurgitant flow / fraction CW density and contour Anatomy Color Flow PW Doppler CW Doppler
6
Mitral Valve Pathology
Primary Secondary
7
MR – Challenges in severity assessment m
Emphasis on the 3 components of the jet Assessing Vena Contracta Flow Convergenge (PISA) Assumptions of hemispheric geometry Less accurate in eccentric jets Limitations in non-holosystolic MR Pulsed Doppler Volumetric Quantitation Quantification of multiple jets Quantifying MR after MitraClip
8
MR– Color Doppler 3 components of the jet
9
MR– Color Doppler
10
MR– Color Doppler
11
MR – Challenges in severity assessment
Emphasis on the 3 components of the jet Assessing Vena Contracta Flow Convergenge (PISA) Assumptions of hemispheric geometry Less accurate in eccentric jets Limitations in non-holosystolic MR Pulsed Doppler Volumetric Quantitation Quantification of multiple jets Quantifying MR after MitraClip
12
MR - 2D Vena Contracta (VC)
Proximal Jet Width (cm) VC FC Area
13
MR - 3D VC Area VC Area is often not circular in Secondary MR
Severe MR: EROA > 0,4cm2
14
MR – Challenges in severity assessment
Emphasis on the 3 components of the jet Assessing Vena Contracta Flow Convergenge (PISA) Assumptions of hemispheric geometry Less accurate in eccentric jets Limitations in non-holosystolic MR Pulsed Doppler Volumetric Quantitation Quantification of multiple jets Quantifying MR after MitraClip
15
Flow Convergence (PISA)
PISA Method Flow Convergence (PISA) Little. Am J Cardiol,2007;
16
The application of the tool depends on the mechanism
3D PISA The application of the tool depends on the mechanism
17
less accurate in eccentric jets
Flow convergence less accurate in eccentric jets
18
Duration of MR MV Prolapse Functional MR
19
Late systolic MR in MV Prolapse
PISA, EROA, VC - are calculated from a single-frame image - Overestimate MR severity
20
Late systolic MR in MV Prolapse
21
Late systolic MR in MV Prolapse
Is this severe MR?
22
MR – Challenges in severity assessment
Emphasis on the 3 components of the jet Assessing Vena Contracta Flow Convergenge (PISA) Assumptions of hemispheric geometry Less accurate in eccentric jets Limitations in non-holosystolic MR Pulsed Doppler Volumetric Quantitation Quantification of multiple jets Quantifying MR after MitraClip
23
MR – Pulsed Doppler Volumetric Quantitation
Advantages Quantitative, valid with multiple jets and eccentric jets. Pitfalls MV annulus diameter is less reliable in calcific MV Needs training
24
MR – Challenges in severity assessment
Emphasis on the 3 components of the jet Assessing Vena Contracta Flow Convergenge (PISA) Assumptions of hemispheric geometry Less accurate in eccentric jets Limitations in non-holosystolic MR Pulsed Doppler Volumetric Quantitation Quantification of multiple jets Quantifying MR after MitraClip
25
MR - Quantification after MitraClip
26
Tissue gain setting can influence the size of the visible VC area
MR - Quantification of multiple jets Tissue gain setting can influence the size of the visible VC area Little JACC imag 2012;5:
27
MR – Stress echocardiography
Primary MR Patients with asymptomatic severe MR Symptomatic patients with moderate MR Secondary MR Dyspnea on exertion disproportionate to LV systolic dysfunction or MR severity at rest Recurrent and unexplained acute pulmonary edema Patients with intermediate severity MR who are scheduled for CABG Persistent Pulmonary Hypertension after mitral valve repair
28
MR – Stress echocardiography Markers of poor prognosis
Supine bicycle / treadmill exercise Assessment MR severity SPAP LV contractile reserve RV contractile reserve Markers of poor prognosis Increase ≥1 grade in MR (from moderate-to-severeMR) SPAP≥60 mmHg, Lack of contractile reserve (increase <5% in EF or <2% in GLS) m TAPSE <19mm MR quantification becomes more difficult at heart rate >115 bpm
29
MR – Stress echocardiography
MV prolapse and asymptomatic severe MR Lancellotti et al. Eur Heart J – Cardiovascular Imaging (2016);1191–1229
30
Conclusions What is the mechanism of MR? What is the severity of MR
What is the consequence of MR on LV/LA? Is it time for valve intervention?
31
Conclusions Use all echo parameters and correlate with clinical findings. Consider exercise echo if parameters are discordant. Optimize management of heart failure before labeling as severe MR.
32
Thank you
Similar presentations
© 2024 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.