Moderately severe to severe mitral regurgitation complicating acute myocardial infarction was associated with a 1-year mortality of 52% (95% CI, 38% to 66%; P=0.06 for independent prediction).
Cohort (n=1,480)
No
Acute myocardial infarction complicated by mitral regurgitation (n=1,480)
Moderately severe to severe (3+ or 4+) mitral regurgitation vs Lesser degrees of mitral regurgitation
Mortality (38% to 66%), p=0.06
p-value: p=0.06
Objective: To describe outcomes of patients sustaining an acute myocardial infarction complicated by mitral regurgitation managed with contemporary reperfusion therapies. Design: Inception cohort case study. Long-term follow-up was obtained in 99% of all patients. Setting: University referral center. Patients: A series of 1480 consecutive patients presenting between April 1986 and March 1989 who had emergency cardiac catheterization within 6 hours of infarction. Fifty patients were found to have moderately severe or severe mitral regurgitation. Outcome Measures: Mortality; follow-up cardiac catheterization in patients with regurgitation. Results: Acute ischemic moderately severe to severe (3 + or 4 +) mitral regurgitation was associated with a mortality of 24% at 30 days (95% Cl, 12% to 36%), 42% at 6 months (Cl, 28% to 56%), and 52% at 1 year (Cl, 38% to 66%); multivariable analysis identified 3 + or 4 + mitral regurgitation as a possible independent predictor of mortality (P = 0.06). Patients with mitral regurgitation tended to be female, older, and to have cerebrovascular disease, diabetes, and preexisting symptomatic coronary artery disease. A physical examination did not identify 50% of patients with moderately severe to severe regurgitation. Acute reperfusion with thrombolysis or angioplasty did not reliably reverse valvular incompetence. In this observational study, the greatest in-hospital and 1-year mortalities were seen in patients reperfused with emergency balloon angioplasty, whereas patients managed medically or with coronary bypass surgery had lower mortalities. Conclusions: Moderately severe to severe (3 + or 4 +) mitral regurgitation complicating acute myocardial infarction portends a grave prognosis. Acute reperfusion does not reduce mortality to levels experienced by patients with lesser degrees of mitral regurgitation nor does it reliably restore valvular competence.
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James E. Tcheng
Interventional Cardiology
John D. Jackman
Duke University
Charlotte Nelson
University of British Columbia
Annals of Internal Medicine
University of California, San Francisco
Duke University
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Tcheng et al. (Wed,) conducted a cohort in Acute myocardial infarction complicated by mitral regurgitation (n=1,480). Moderately severe to severe (3+ or 4+) mitral regurgitation vs. Lesser degrees of mitral regurgitation was evaluated on Mortality (95% CI 38% to 66%, p=0.06). Moderately severe to severe mitral regurgitation complicating acute myocardial infarction was associated with a 1-year mortality of 52% (95% CI, 38% to 66%; P=0.06 for independent prediction).
synapsesocial.com/papers/6a0512f370c113c9996a6441 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.7326/0003-4819-117-1-18