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Medical Health Encyclopedia
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Mitral regurgitation - chronic

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Heart, section through the middle
Heart, section through the middle
Heart, front view
Heart, front view


Mitral regurgitation - chronic

Definition:

Chronic mitral regurgitation is a progressive, long-term disorder in which the mitral valve, which separates the left upper chamber of the heart (atrium) from the left lower chamber (ventricle), does not close properly. This causes blood to leak (backflow or regurgitation) into the left atrium from the left ventricle during contraction of the heart (systole).

Alternative Names:
Chronic mitral valve regurgitation; Mitral valve insufficiency

Text Continues Below



Causes, incidence, and risk factors:

Mitral regurgitation is the most common type of heart valve insufficiency. Any disorder that weakens or damages this valve can prevent it from closing properly, causing this type of leakage. Mitral regurgitation becomes chronic when the condition persists rather than occurring for only a short time period.

When the mitral valve fails to close properly, blood flows back to the left atrium from the left ventricle. The blood flow to the body (cardiac output) is decreased as a result, so the heart pumps harder to try to compensate.

Chronic mitral regurgitation affects approximately 6% of women and 3% of men, but after 55 years of age, some degree of mitral regurgitation is found in almost 20% of men and women who undergo echocardiograms.

Congenital (present from birth) mitral regurgitation is rare if it is not part of a more complex heart defect or syndrome. Mitral valve prolapse, which involves weakening and ballooning out of the valve and affects about 5% of the population, is a relatively common cause of chronic mitral regurgitation.

About one-third of all cases of chronic mitral regurgitation are caused by rheumatic heart disease, a complication of untreated strep throat that is becoming less common. Rheumatic heart disease can lead to thickening, rigidity, and retraction of the mitral valve leaflets

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