Mitral valve prolapse (MVP) is a frequent affection of the mitral valve or its sub-valvular apparatus with a prevalence of 2-3% in the general population. This valvular disease is generally considered as benign, but may at term evolve toward mitral valve regurgitation of various severity and/or arrhythmia. Mitral valve prolapse is routinely diagnosed using transthoracic echocardiography and only patients with significant mitral regurgitation will undergo subsequent examination (24-hour external loop recording, exercise ECG, cardiac MRI) and a close follow-up. External loop recording and exercise ECG have an interest in the identification of patients presenting with arrhythmic complications, such as premature ventricular contractions, and in the global evaluation of hemodynamic consequences of the mitral regurgitation. More recently, detection of myocardial fibrosis among patients with MVP and severe ventricular arrhythmia has been identified. Fibrosis could evolve independently of the valvular regurgitation's severity and could be a substrate (myocardial scar) leading to ventricular arrhythmia. However, no study has specifically characterized myocardial lesions among patients with MVP and none, or not significant, mitral regurgitation. Using cardiac magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), gold standard technique in myocardial imaging and characterization, and echocardiography, particularly speckle-tracking imaging, identification of static (fibrosis) and/or dynamic (ventricular systolic deformation patterns using speckle-tracking strain) myocardial lesions. Identification of patients with impaired deformation patterns, fibrosis or with premature ventricular contractions may isolate a sub-group of patients with a higher risk of severe ventricular arrhythmia for whom a closer follow-up could be justified.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
NON_RANDOMIZED
Purpose
DIAGNOSTIC
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
239
Group-A patients, with mitral valve prolapse but no mitral regurgitation, will undergo specifically for research purposes a cardiac MRI, 24-hour external loop recording and exercise ECG on top of regular echocardiography evaluation. Realization of these examinations will be performed according to recommendations for patients with mitral regurgitation (groups B, C and D)
Nancy University Hospital, Department of Cardiology
Vandœuvre-lès-Nancy, France
Evidence of ventricular arrythmia (premature ventricular contraction or tachycardia)
Occurrence of any ventricular arrythmia on external loop recording or exercise ECG
Time frame: Within 15 days
Evidence of myocardial fibrosis on cardiac MRI
Visualisation of any late gadolinium enhancement
Time frame: Within 15 days
Estimation of mitral regurgitation severity on echocardiography
Time frame: At inclusion
Description and evaluation of ventricular myocardial deformation patterns
Comparison of deformation patterns using speckle-tracking echocardiography and strain in cardiac MRI
Time frame: Within 15 days
Comparative evaluation of mitral regurgitation using echocardiography and cardiac MRI
Time frame: Within 15 days
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