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      Predictors of Developing Significant Mitral Regurgitation Following Percutaneous Mitral Commissurotomy with Inoue Balloon Technique

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          Abstract

          Background. Despite the high technical expertise in percutaneous mitral commissurotomy (PMC), mitral regurgitation (MR) remains a major procedure-related complication. The aim of this work is to find out the most sensitive and applicable predictors of development of significant mitral regurgitation (SMR) following percutaneous mitral commissurotomy using Inoue balloon technique. Methods. We studied prospectively the preprocedural (clinical, echocardiography, and hemodynamic) and procedural predictors of significant mitral regurgitation (identified as increase of ≥2/4 grades of pre-PMC MR by color Doppler flow mapping) following valvuloplasty using Inoue balloon in 108 consecutive patients with severe mitral stenosis. Multiple stepwise logistic regression analysis was performed for variables found positive on univariate analysis to determine the most important predictor(s) of developing SMR. Results. The incidence of SMR following PMC using Inoue technique was 18.5% (10 patients). MV scoring systems were the only variables that showed significant differences between both groups (Group A without SMR and Group B with SMR). However, no clinical, other echocardiographic measurements, hemodynamic or procedural variables could predict the development of SMR. Using multiple regression analysis, the best predictive factor for the risk of SMR after Inoue BMV was the total MR-echo score with a cutoff point of 7 and a predictive percentage of 97.7%. Conclusions. The total MR-echo score is the only independent predictor of SMR following PMC using Inoue technique with a cutoff point of 7.

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          Most cited references37

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          Clinical application of transvenous mitral commissurotomy by a new balloon catheter.

          A new balloon catheter was developed which allows mitral commissurotomy without thoracotomy. The procedure has been successful in five of the six patients with mitral stenosis so treated. In the remaining patient, the procedure could not be performed because of technical difficulties. The balloon is reinforced with a nylon micromesh and its shape changes in three stages, depending on the extent of inflation. It is inserted from the saphenous vein into the mitral orifice transseptally, fixed across the mitral orifice with partial inflation, and finally inflated to full its extent, separating the fused commissures by its expansile force. After the procedure, catheterization revealed a significant reduction in the mean diastolic pressure gradient across the mitral valve without resultant mitral regurgitation in each patient. Two-dimensional echocardiograms showed a marked to moderate degree of dilatation of the mitral orifice in each patient. All five patients are well with remarkable clinical improvements 2 to 16 months after the procedure.
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            Percutaneous balloon dilatation of the mitral valve: an analysis of echocardiographic variables related to outcome and the mechanism of dilatation.

            Twenty two patients (four men, 18 women, mean age 56 years, range 21 to 88 years) with a history of rheumatic mitral stenosis were studied by cross sectional echocardiography before and after balloon dilatation of the mitral valve. The appearance of the mitral valve on the pre-dilatation echocardiogram was scored for leaflet mobility, leaflet thickening, subvalvar thickening, and calcification. Mitral valve area, left atrial volume, transmitral pressure difference, pulmonary artery pressure, cardiac output, cardiac rhythm, New York Heart Association functional class, age, and sex were also studied. Because there was some increase in valve area in almost all patients the results were classified as optimal or suboptimal (final valve area less than 1.0 cm2, final left atrial pressure greater than 10 mm Hg, or final valve area less than 25% greater than the initial area). The best multiple logistic regression fit was found with the total echocardiographic score alone. A high score (advanced leaflet deformity) was associated with a suboptimal outcome while a low score (a mobile valve with limited thickening) was associated with an optimal outcome. No other haemodynamic or clinical variables emerged as predictors of outcome in this analysis. Examination of pre-dilatation and post-dilatation echocardiograms showed that balloon dilatation reliably resulted in cleavage of the commissural plane and thus an increase in valve area.
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              Immediate results of percutaneous mitral commissurotomy. A predictive model on a series of 1514 patients.

              The wide use of percutaneous mitral commissurotomy (PMC) underlines the need to identify the predictive factors of the results. Using a large series allowed us to develop a multivariate model that can be applied to improve patient selection. Between 1986 and 1995. PMC was undertaken in 1514 patients. Mean age was 45 +/- 15 years. Echocardiography showed that 245 patients (16%) had pliable valves and mild chordal thickening (group 1), 886 (59%) had extensive subvalvular disease (group 2), and 383 (25%) had calcified valves (group 3). PMC failed in 22 patients; it was performed with a single balloon in 30 patients, a double balloon in 586, and the Inoue balloon in 876. Good immediate results were defined as a valve area > or = 1.5 cm2 with mitral regurgitation Sellers' grade < or = 2 and were obtained in 1348 patients (89%). A logistic model developed from the first 1088 cases identified the following predictors of immediate results: age (P = .004), echocardiographic group (P < .0001), valve area (P < .0001), and effective balloon dilating area (EBDA) (P = .03). Two interactions were significant: age at previous commissurotomy (P = .013) and EBDA by initial mitral regurgitation (P = .034). The type of balloon was of borderline significance (P = .09). The model was validated on an independent sample comprising the subsequent 426 procedures. For a threshold of probability of good results of .75, sensitivity was 92%, specificity 25%, and predictive accuracy 87%. Prediction of the immediate results of PMC is multifactorial. The predictive model developed and validated can be contributive in decision making for individual patients.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Cardiol Res Pract
                CRP
                Cardiology Research and Practice
                SAGE-Hindawi Access to Research
                2090-8016
                2090-0597
                2011
                15 August 2011
                : 2011
                : 703515
                Affiliations
                1Cardiology Department, Faculty of Medicine, Tanta University, Egypt
                2King Fahad Medical City, Riyadh, Saudi Arabia
                Author notes
                *Abdelfatah A. Elasfar: elasfar_egy@ 123456hotmail.com

                Academic Editor: Veselin Mitrovic

                Article
                10.4061/2011/703515
                3157670
                21876824
                73243387-7886-4a26-9775-86a5f7ee30c8
                Copyright © 2011 A. A. Elasfar and H. F. Elsokkary.

                This is an open access article distributed under the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.

                History
                : 23 December 2010
                : 7 July 2011
                : 7 July 2011
                Categories
                Clinical Study

                Cardiovascular Medicine
                Cardiovascular Medicine

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