Mitral Valve Aneurysm associated with Aortic Valve Endocarditis and Regurgitation

Authors

  • Amish N. Raval University of Western Ontario, Division of Cardiovascular Medicine London Health Sciences Centre, University Campus, Canada
  • Alan H. Menkis University of Western Ontario, Division of Cardiovascular Medicine London Health Sciences Centre, University Campus, Canada
  • Derek R. Boughner University of Western Ontario, Division of Cardiovascular Medicine London Health Sciences Centre, University Campus, Canada

Abstract

Mitral valve aneurysms are rare complications occurring most commonly in association with aortic valve infective endocarditis. [Decroly 1989, Chua 1990, Northridge 1991, Karalis 1992, Roguin 1996, Mollod 1997, Vilacosta 1997, Cai 1999, Vilacosta 1999, Teskey 1999, Chan 2000, Goh 2000, Marcos-Alberca 2000] While the mechanism of the development of this lesion is unclear, complications such as perforation can occur and lead to significant mitral regurgitation. [Decroly 1989, Karalis 1992, Teskey 1999, Vilacosta 1999] The case of a 69-year-old male with Streptococcus Sanguis aortic valve endocarditis and associated anterior mitral leaflet aneurysm is presented. Following surgery, tissue pathology of the excised lesion revealed myxomatous degeneration and no active endocarditis or inflammatory cells. This may add support to the hypothesis that physical stress due to severe aortic insufficiency and structural weakening, without infection of the anterior mitral leaflet, can lead to the development of this lesion.

Published

2002-09-01

How to Cite

Raval, A. N., Menkis, A. H., & Boughner, D. R. (2002). Mitral Valve Aneurysm associated with Aortic Valve Endocarditis and Regurgitation. The Heart Surgery Forum, 5(3), E298-E299. Retrieved from https://journal.hsforum.com/index.php/HSF/article/view/6153

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Article