The American journal of cardiology
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The mechanical factors by which chronic respiratory insufficiency may influence right and left ventricular performance during both spontaneous and mechanical ventilation are reviewed. During a spontaneous inspiration the right heart distends because of increased inflow and increased pulmonary vascular resistance. This decreases the effective left ventricular compliance, through ventricular interdependence, reducing the gradient for pulmonary venous return. ⋯ This increased inspiratory flow cannot be attributed to a phase lag in the right heart output reaching the left heart chambers because, even with a constant pulmonary arterial inflow, aortic flow increases during inspiration. Several factors may act in concert to improve left ventricular performance, despite the adverse effects of intermittent positive pressure ventilation on the right ventricle. These include (1) a decrease in right heart volume, increasing left ventricular compliance and hence the gradient for pulmonary venous return; (2) anterograde emptying of the alveolar capillary bed with lung inflation; (3) the increase in pleural pressure decreasing impedance to left ventricular emptying; and (4) physical compression of the heart by the lungs.
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Mitral valve replacement is considered when there is severe mitral stenosis, severe mitral insufficiency or a combination of the two. Ordinarily, surgical replacement is considered only for patients who are in functional classes III or IV and do not respond to medical management. Patients with symptomatic mitral stenosis should be treated with mitral commissurotomy whenever possible. ⋯ In infective endocarditis, operation is more often needed because of congestive heart failure than because of refractory infection. Evidence of mitral stenosis or insufficiency in a patient with a previously implanted prosthetic valve usually indicates an urgent need for study and early operation. Uncommon causes of mitral incompetence that may require valve replacement are endocardial fibroelastosis, Marfan's syndrome, calcified mitral anulus, osteogenesis imperfecta, methysergide-induced heart disease and carcinoid heart disease.
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The Starr-Edwards ball valve prosthesis is generally the standard by which other cardiac valve substitutes are compared. This report reviews information pertaining to several prostheses--the Beall mitral valve and the Bjork-Shiley, Braunwald-Cutter, Lillehei-Kaster and Smeloff-Cutter aortic and mitral valves--considered by some to have specific advantages over the Starr-Edwards valves. Hospital and late mortality rates after valve replacement are comparable for the four aortic valve prostheses reviewed and depend more on patient selection than on the specific prosthesis utilized. ⋯ On the basis of postoperative data, the five mitral valve prostheses reviewed do not appear to have substantial hemodynamic differences. For patients with a small left ventricular cavity the low profile prostheses, such as the Beall, Bjork-Shiley and Lillehei-Kaster, may be advantageous. Most available evidence indicates that patients receiving aortic or mitral valve prostheses should be given anticoagulant therapy postoperatively.