Changes in left ventricular morphology and function after mitral valve surgery.

Journal: The American Journal Of Cardiology
Published:
Abstract

Degenerative mitral valve disease is the leading cause of mitral regurgitation in North America. Surgical intervention has hinged on the symptoms and ventricular changes that develop as compensatory ventricular remodeling occurs. In the present study, we sought to characterize the temporal response of left ventricular (LV) morphology and function to mitral valve surgery for degenerative disease and to identify the preoperative factors that influence reverse remodeling. From 1986 to 2007, 2,778 patients with isolated degenerative mitral valve disease underwent valve repair (n = 2,607 [94%]) or replacement (n = 171 [6%]) and had ≥1 postoperative transthoracic echocardiogram; 5,336 transthoracic echocardiograms were available for analysis. Multivariate longitudinal repeated-measures analysis was performed to identify the factors associated with reverse remodeling. The LV dimensions decreased in the first year after surgery (end-diastolic from 5.7 ± 0.80 to 4.9 ± 1.4 cm; end-systolic from 3.4 ± 0.71 to 3.1 ± 1.4 cm). The LV mass index decreased from 139 ± 44 to 112 ± 73 g/m(2). The reduction in LV hypertrophy was less pronounced in patients with greater preoperative left heart enlargement (p <0.0001) and a greater preoperative LV mass (p <0.0001). The postoperative LV ejection fraction initially decreased from 58 ± 7.0% to 53 ± 20%, increased slightly during the first postoperative year, and was negatively influenced by preoperative heart failure symptoms (p <0.0001) and a lower preoperative LV ejection fraction (p <0.0001). The risk-adjusted response of LV morphology and function to valve repair and replacement was similar (p >0.2). In conclusion, a positive response toward normalization of LV morphology and function after mitral valve surgery is greatest in the first year. The best response occurs when surgery is performed before left heart dilation, LV hypertrophy, or LV dysfunction develop.

Authors
Alexis Shafii, A Gillinov, Tomislav Mihaljevic, William Stewart, Lillian Batizy, Eugene Blackstone
Relevant Conditions

Mitral Valve Regurgitation