Atrioventricular valve duplication is a rare congenital cardiac anomaly. The anomaly is usually recognized as an incidental finding at autopsy, open heart surgery, or two-dimensional echocardiography. In this article we present the transthoracic and transesophageal presentation of a case of mitral and a case of tricuspid valve duplication. The hemodynamic consideration of the lesions is discussed with a review of the literature. (ECHOCARDIOGRAPHY, Volume 13, January 1996)
We studied the response in left ventricular (LV) internal dimensions and posterior wall thickness during the performance of sudden strenuous exercise without warm-up (SSE) and sudden strenuous exercise with warm-up (SSEw) in 15 healthy, untrained college-aged males (26 +/- 5.0 yr). Measurements of left ventricular end-diastolic dimension (LVEDD), left ventricular end-systolic dimension (LVESD), stroke dimension (SD = LVEDD-LVESD), fractional shortening (FS = SD/EDD) and posterior wall thickness (PWT) were obtained from continuous 2-D targeted on M-mode echocardiography. Continuous EKG and blood pressure were obtained at rest and during the final 10 s of SSE (30 s of upright leg cycle ergometry of 400 W at 80 rpm). SSEw was preceded by warm-up exercise (6 min of graded leg cycle exercise of 2-min stages initial load 30 W, increasing in 30-W increments at 60 rpm, followed immediately by SSE). Our findings revealed that there were no significant differences in the LV internal dimensions (LVEDD, LVESD, FS, PWT), HR max, RPP max, ECG, and MAP max between SSE and SSEw. Sudden strenuous exercise without warm-up is not associated with a reduced LV function. The results of this study are contradictory to previous findings that have suggested that SSE is associated with transient global left ventricular (LV) dysfunction.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.