Does the origin of premature ventricular contractions (right vs left) affect the clinical course in patients with mitral valve prolapse syndrome?
In patients with mitral valve prolapse and chronic ventricular dysrhythmia, left-sided PVCs may be associated with older age and a trend toward a more malignant clinical course compared to right-sided PVCs.
Twenty-two patients with the mitral valve prolapse-click syndrome and chronic ventricular dysrhythmia were judged to have either right or left ventricular premature contractions on the basis of electrocardiographic QRS configuration of the premature beats. The 11 patients with right-sided premature ventricular contractions (PVCs) were younger (P < .01), and had less abnormal electrocardiograms (NS) and fewer complications (NS) than those with left-sided PVCs. Coronary arteriograms performed on four in the latter group were normal, supporting a noncoronary etiology for the arrhythmia. Thus, patients with mitral valve prolapse and chronic ventricular dysrhythmia appear to have an equal prevalence of right- and left-sided premature complexes and, though not statistically significant, there was a consistent trend toward a more malignant course in the group with left ventricular premature complexes.
MAUTNER et al. (Mon,) studied this question.
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