• Journal of cardiology · Oct 1996

    [Nonrheumatic calcification of the mitral valve in patients with stenotic calcified bicuspid aortic valve].

    • H Sawada, M Shionoya, Y Shibata, K Aoki, S Furuta, and K Kato.
    • Cardiovascular Institute, Tokyo.
    • J Cardiol. 1996 Oct 1;28(4):221-6.

    AbstractThe pathogenesis of nonrheumatic calcification of the mitral valve was investigated by analyzing the clinical and echocardiographic characteristics of patients with mitral valvular calcification without any findings suggestive of rheumatic heart disease or infective endocarditis. Calcification of the mitral valve was observed in nine patients, who all had calcified stenotic (aortic valve area < 1 cm2) bicuspid aortic valve. Calcification of the mitral valve was localized to the basal portion of ventricular aspect of the anterior mitral leaflet and contiguous to that of the aortic valve. Mobility and thickness of the mitral leaflet was normal except for the calcified portion. Calcification of the mitral valve was not contiguous to posterior mitral annular calcification nor was related to direction of aortic regurgitant flow. In patients with calcified stenotic bicuspid aortic valve, calcification of the mitral valve was not associated with location of the two aortic cusps, aortic valve area, aortic valvular peak pressure gradient, direction of the left ventricular outflow, end-diastolic left ventricular outflow tract dimension, end-diastolic dimension of the aortic annulus, incidence of aortic regurgitation, calcification of the aortic arch, or risk factors of atherosclerosis. Six patients with mitral valvular calcification had aortic valve replacement. Preoperative coronary angiogram of these patients was normal. Calcification of the aortic valve was on the ventricular and aortic aspects. The calcification of the aortic valve, anterior mitral ring, or anterior mitral leaflet was not rheumatic in these six patients. Rheumatic disease, risk factors of atherosclerosis, mechanical stress by left ventricular outflow or aortic regurgitant flow, or mitral annular calcification did not appear to be related to mitral valvular calcification. The distribution of aortic and mitral valvular calcification suggested that the calcification of the mitral valve was due to progression of calcification of the bicuspid aortic valve.

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