Just before mitral-septal contact, the protruding leaflets project at high angles relative to flow. At these high angles, flow drag, the pushing force of flow, is the dominant hydrodynamic force on the protruding leaflet and appears to be the immediate cause of obstruction. The high angle between flow direction and the protruding leaflet precludes significant Venturi effects. Even earlier in systole, at leaflet coaptation, flow drag is dominant in half of the patients, with angles relative to flow > 15 degrees. After obstruction is triggered, it appears from our data and model that the leaflet is forced against the septum by the pressure difference across the orifice. The increasing acceleration of Doppler flow is explained by a time-dependent amplifying feedback loop in which the rising pressure difference across the orifice leads to a smaller orifice and a higher pressure difference.
The diagnosis of mitral stenosis may not be suspected in the presence of advanced age, other serious cardiac and medical conditions, or mechanical factors that complicate the physical examination. In these patients, mitral stenosis may be hemodynamically significant and may cause significant symptoms.
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