Treatment Overview
Treatment for chronicmitral valve regurgitation (MR) includes monitoring
your heart function and symptoms, as well as treating symptoms as they develop.
If MR becomes severe, the mitral valve will need to be repaired or replaced.
Treatment for acute MR is immediate. Medicines and
urgent surgery are usually necessary.
As you review your treatment
options, consider the following:
- If you have mild-to-moderate chronic MR and no
symptoms, your doctor may only monitor your condition.
- If you have
moderate-to-severe MR but no symptoms, your doctor may suggest repair or
replacement of the mitral valve before symptoms develop, to prevent further
heart damage.
- If you have chronic MR, medicines may be used to
treat your symptoms and prevent complications. For acute MR, medicines are used
to stabilize your condition, but urgent surgery is usually necessary.
- Severe MR generally requires valve repair or replacement to
prevent
heart failure. Repairing a damaged valve is preferred
over replacement.
Initial treatment
Initial treatment for
chronic mitral valve regurgitation depends on whether
you have symptoms and how severe the regurgitation is. If you don't have
symptoms and you only have mild-to-moderate regurgitation, your doctor may only
monitor your heart and valve function with an
echocardiogram.
The echocardiogram uses
painless ultrasound waves to check how well your heart is pumping blood (ejection fraction) and to measure the size of your
left ventricle. The smaller the ejection fraction, the harder your heart must
work to pump a sufficient volume of blood.
Surgery is recommended
when ejection fraction drops below 60% and/or your left ventricle is larger
than 40 mm at rest.1 If you need surgery, your doctor
may suggest
repairing or replacing your mitral valve to avoid
further heart damage. When you begin to have symptoms, the regurgitation is
advanced, and you will need surgery to prevent
heart failure.
Your doctor may prescribe
medicines, such as:
Initial treatment for acute MR
includes use of the above medicines as necessary to stabilize your condition.
If medicines don't help, an
intra-aortic balloon pump may be necessary. This
device has a balloon attached to the end of a catheter and is threaded up into
the aorta, the main artery leaving the heart. The balloon inflates and deflates
in sequence with your heartbeat to help circulate blood, decrease the heart's
workload, and increase blood flow. Urgent surgery to repair or replace your
mitral valve will also be necessary, as well as treatment for the cause of the
acute MR.
Ongoing treatment
Like initial care for chronic
mitral valve regurgitation (MR), ongoing treatment
with medicines or surgery varies according to the progression of the disease.
Your doctor may prescribe medicines to help control high blood
pressure.
You will need periodic
echocardiograms to see if regurgitation is getting
worse, and to check the size of your
left ventricle and how well it is working. In chronic
MR, the left ventricle expands in size as it tries to accommodate the larger
volume of blood going into the chamber. The larger the left ventricle, the more
advanced the MR.
Your doctor will also monitor your heart's
ejection fraction, which is a measure of how well your
heart is pumping blood. Ejection fraction is the amount of blood pumped out of
the ventricle (stroke volume) divided by the total amount of blood in the left
ventricle at rest. The smaller the ejection fraction, the harder your heart
must work to pump a sufficient volume of blood.
Surgery is
recommended when ejection fraction drops below 60% and/or your left ventricle
is larger than 40 mm at rest.1 If you need surgery,
your doctor may suggest
repairing or replacing your mitral valve to avoid
further heart damage. When you begin to have symptoms, the regurgitation is
advanced, and you will need surgery to prevent
heart failure.
Treatment if the condition gets worse
If your
mitral valve regurgitation becomes severe and you
develop symptoms of
heart failure, such as shortness of breath, swelling,
and fatigue, surgery to
repair or replace your mitral valve will be necessary.
Surgery is also recommended when your
ejection fraction drops below 60% and/or your left
ventricle is larger than 40 mm at rest.1
Some doctors believe it's best to repair or replace the mitral valve before you
develop severe symptoms because it leads to better long-term health. On the
other hand, surgery to correct MR is a major procedure that has its own risks
and complications. Even if you have no symptoms, talk to your doctor about the
benefits of surgery, along with your heart's condition, your age, and your
overall health.
The decision between repairing or replacing the
valve depends on the type of damage to the mitral valve. For instance, repair
is more successful if there is limited damage to certain areas of the mitral
valve flaps (leaflets) or to the chordae tendineae, the tough fibers that
control movement of the mitral valve leaflets. But replacement is usually
preferred for people who have a hard, calcified mitral valve ring (annulus) or
widespread damage to the valve and surrounding tissue.
Repair may
be done by reshaping the valve or removing excess tissue, adding support to the
valve ring, or attaching the valve to other cordlike tissues in the heart
(chordal transposition).
With replacement, the badly damaged valve
is removed, and a mechanical (plastic or metal) or a bioprosthetic valve
(usually made from pig tissue) is sewn into place. If you receive a mechanical
valve, you are more likely to develop blood clots in the heart than if you
receive a bioprosthetic valve, so you will need anticoagulant medicine for the
rest of your life to prevent clots from forming and possibly causing a
stroke.