mitral valve
TRANSCRIPT
Discuss mitral valve apparatus
Clinical features, investigation and management of Mitral Stenosis
-Dr. Uphar Gupta
Moderator – Dr. Prabhakar K
The mitral valve
• AKA bicuspid valve or left
atrioventricular valve
• dual-flap valve
• lies between the left atrium
(LA) and the left ventricle
(LV)
The mitral apparatus
• composed of the left atrial wall, the annulus,
the leaflets, the chordae tendineae, the
papillary muscles, and the left ventricular wall.
Left atrial wall
• The left atrial myocardium extends over the
proximal portion of the posterior leaflet.
• Left atrial enlargement can result in mitral
regurgitation by affecting the posterior leaflet.
• The anterior leaflet is not affected, because of
its attachment to the root of the aorta
Mitral annulus
• fibrous ring that connects with the leaflets.
• not a continuous ring around the mitral orifice
• D-shaped
• The straight border of the annulus is posterior to the
aortic valve.
• The aortic valve is located between the ventricular
septum and the mitral valve.
• The annulus functions as a sphincter that
contracts and reduces the surface area of the
valve during systole to ensure complete closure of
the leaflets.
• Annular dilatation of the mitral valve causes poor
leaflet apposition - results in mitral regurgitation.
Mitral valve leaflets
• continuous veil inserted around the circumference of the mitral
orifice.
• The free edges of the leaflets have several indentations.
• Two of these indentations, the anterolateral and posteromedial
commissures, divide the leaflets into anterior and posterior.
• These commissures can be accurately identified by the insertions of
the commissural chordae tendineae into the leaflets.
• Normally, the leaflets are thin, pliable,
translucent, and soft.
• Each leaflet has an atrial and a ventricular
surface.
Anterior leaflet
• located posterior to the aortic root and is also anchored to the
aortic root, unlike the posterior leaflet.
• also known as the aortic, septal, greater, or anteromedial leaflet.
• The anterior leaflet is large and semicircular in shape.
• The 2 zones on the anterior leaflet are referred to as rough and
clear zones, according to the chordae tendineae insertion.
Posterior leaflet
• ventricular, mural, smaller, or posterolateral leaflet.
• The posterior leaflet is the section of the mitral valve
that is located posterior to the 2 commissural areas.
• It has a wider attachment to the annulus than the
anterior leaflet.
• It is divided into 3 scallops by 2 indentations or clefts.
Chordae tendineae
• Small fibrous strings that originate either from
the apical portion of the papillary muscles or
directly from the ventricular wall and insert
into the valve leaflets or the muscle.
Commissural chordae
• Commissural chordae are the chordae that insert
into the interleaflet or commissural areas located at
the junction of the anterior and posterior leaflets.
• Two types of commissural chordae exist.
• Posteromedial commissural chordae and
anterolateral commissural
Leaflet chordae
• insert into the anterior or posterior leaflets.
• Two types of chordae tendineae are connected to the
anterior leaflet.
• The first is rough zone chordae, which insert into the distal
portion of the anterior leaflet known as the rough zone.
• The second is strut chordae, which are the chordae that
branch before inserting into the anterior leaflet.
Papillary muscles and left ventricular wall
• represent the muscular components of the mitral apparatus.
• The papillary muscles normally arise from the apex and middle third
of the left ventricular wall.
• The anterolateral papillary muscle is normally larger than the
posteromedial papillary muscle and is supplied by the left anterior
descending artery or the left circumflex artery.
• The posteromedial papillary muscle is supplied by the right coronary
artery.
• Extreme fusion of papillary muscle can result
into mitral stenosis.
• On the other hand, rupture of a papillary
muscle, usually the complication of acute
myocardial infarction, will result in acute
mitral regurgitation.
Microscopic Anatomy
• The 3 layers of the ventricular wall are the
endocardium, the myocardium, and the epicardium.
• The endocardium consists of a simple squamous
endothelium and a thin subendothelial tissue.
• The myocardium consists of cardiac muscle fibers.
• The epicardium consists of a simple squamous
mesothelium and subepicardial tissue.
• There is a layer of dense fibrous connective tissue, called the
annulus fibrosus, located between the atrium and ventricle.
• The mitral valve connects the left atrium (LA) and the left
ventricle (LV).
• The mitral valve leaflets are composed of an outer layer of
endocardium and a dense connective tissue core, which is
continuous with the annulus fibrosus.
2- to 3-mm zone of overlap (the zona coapta).
Apical four-chamber view recorded in systole in a normal patient
MITRAL STENOSIS
• Obstruction to blood flow between the left atrium and the left
ventricle
• ETIOLOGY:-
– rheumatic carditis.
– Congenital MS is uncommon.
– MS, usually rheumatic, in association with atrial septal defect is called
Lutembacher syndrome.
– massive mitral valve annular calcification. This process occurs most
frequently in elderly patients and produces MS by limiting leaflet motion.
• Rheumatic changes present in 99% of stenotic mitral valves excised at
the time of mitral valve (MV) replacement.
• 25% - isolated MS
• 40% - combined MS and MR.
• Multivalve involvement - 38% of MS patients,
– Aortic valve 35%
– tricuspid valve 6%.
– pulmonic valve is rarely affected.
• Two thirds of all patients with rheumatic MS are female.
Acute rheumatic fever
inflammation and edema of
the leaflets
small fibrin-platelet thrombi along the leaflet contact zones.
Scarring
Earlier Stages • relatively flexible leaflets snap open in diastole into a curved shape
because of restriction of motion at the leaflet tips.
• This diastolic doming is most evident in the motion of the anterior leaflet
and becomes less prominent as the leaflets become more fibrotic and
calcified.
• The symmetrical fusion of the commissures results in a small central oval
orifice in diastole that on pathologic specimens is shaped like a fish
mouth or buttonhole because the anterior leaflet is not in the
physiological open position .
End-stage Disease
• thickened leaflets -adherent and rigid that they cannot open or
shut, reducing or, rarely, even abolishing the first heart sound and
leading to combined MS and MR.
• When rheumatic fever results exclusively or predominantly in
contraction and fusion of the chordae tendineae, with little fusion
of the valvular commissures, dominant MR results.
• Aschoff bodies, the pathologic hallmark of rheumatic disease, are
most frequently seen in the myocardium, not the valve tissue.
OTHER ETIOLOGIES
• rare complication of :-
– malignant carcinoid disease
– systemic lupus erythematosus
– rheumatoid arthritis
– mucopolysaccharidoses of the Hunter-Hurler phenotype,
Fabry disease, and Whipple disease
– Methysergide therapy is an unusual but documented cause of
MS.
Other causes of LA – LV Flow obstruction
– a left atrial tumor, particularly myxoma
– ball valve thrombus in the left atrium
– infective endocarditis with large vegetations
– congenital membrane in the left atrium (cor
triatriatum)
• Severity of mitral valve obstruction is the degree of valve
opening in diastole.
• In normal adults- 4 to 6 cm2
• 2 cm2 - mild MS - blood can flow from the left atrium to the
left ventricle only if propelled by a small pressure gradient.
• 1 cm2 - severe MS, a left atrioventricular pressure gradient of
approximately 20 mm Hg is required to maintain normal
cardiac output at rest
Pulmonary Hypertension
• mean left atrial pressure is elevated - prominent atrial contraction
(a wave), with a gradual pressure decline after mitral valve opening
(y descent).
• mild to moderate MS - pulmonary arterial pressure may be normal
or only minimally elevated at rest but rises during exercise.
• severe MS and those in whom the pulmonary vascular resistance is
significantly increased - pulmonary arterial pressure is elevated
when the patient is at rest.
(1) passive backward transmission of the elevated left atrial
pressure
(2) pulmonary arteriolar constriction, which presumably is
triggered by left atrial and pulmonary venous hypertension
(reactive pulmonary hypertension)
(3) organic obliterative changes in the pulmonary vascular bed,
which may be considered to be a complication of long-
standing and severe MS
• also exert a protective effect
• the elevated precapillary resistance makes the development of
symptoms of pulmonary congestion less likely to occur by
tending to prevent blood from surging into the pulmonary
capillary bed and damming up behind the stenotic mitral valve.
• However, this protection occurs at the expense of a reduced
cardiac output.
• In severe MS - pulmonary vein–bronchial vein shunts occur.
• Their rupture may cause hemoptysis.
• manifest a reduction in pulmonary compliance, increase in the work
of breathing, and redistribution of pulmonary blood flow from the
base to the apex.
• In time, severe pulmonary hypertension results in right-sided heart
failure, with dilation of the right ventricle and its annulus, secondary
tricuspid regurgitation (TR), and sometimes pulmonic regurgitation.
Left Ventricular Function
• The LV chamber typically is normal or small, with
normal systolic function and normal LV end-diastolic
pressure.
• However, coexisting MR, aortic valve lesions, systemic
hypertension, ischemic heart disease, and
cardiomyopathy may all be responsible for elevations
of LV diastolic pressure
Left Atrial Changes
• The combination of mitral valve disease and
atrial inflammation secondary to rheumatic
carditis causes the following:
– (1) left atrial dilation;
– (2) fibrosis of the atrial wall;
– (3) disorganization of the atrial muscle bundles.
• Premature atrial activation, caused by an automatic focus or reentry,
may stimulate the left atrium during the vulnerable period and
thereby precipitate AF.
• AF is often episodic at first but then becomes more persistent.
• AF per se causes diffuse atrophy of atrial muscle, further atrial
enlargement, and further inhomogeneity of refractoriness and
conduction.
• These changes, in turn, lead to irreversible AF.
Symptoms:- Dyspnea
• The most common presenting symptoms - dyspnea, fatigue, and
decreased exercise tolerance.
• Symptoms are caused by a reduced ability to increase cardiac
output normally with exercise or elevated pulmonary venous
pressures and reduced pulmonary compliance.
• Dyspnea may be accompanied by cough and wheezing.
• Vital capacity is reduced, presumably because of the presence of
engorged pulmonary vessels and interstitial edema.
• critical obstruction to left atrial emptying and dyspnea with ordinary
activity (NYHA functional Class III) - orthopnea as well and frank
pulmonary edema.
• The latter may be precipitated by effort, emotional stress, respiratory
infection, fever pregnancy, or AF with a rapid ventricular rate or other
tachyarrhythmia.
• In patients with a markedly elevated pulmonary vascular resistance, RV
function is often impaired and the presentation may also include
symptoms and signs of right heart failure.
Hemoptysis
• sudden and severe - caused by rupture of thin-walled, dilated bronchial
veins, usually as a consequence of a sudden rise in left atrial pressure.
• milder, with only blood-stained sputum associated with attacks of
paroxysmal nocturnal dyspnea.
• pink frothy sputum characteristic of acute pulmonary edema with
rupture of alveolar capillaries.
• also may be caused by pulmonary infarction, a late complication of MS
associated with heart failure.
Chest Pain
• not a typical symptom
• 15%
• indistinguishable from that of angina pectoris
• caused by :-
– severe RV hypertension secondary to the pulmonary vascular disease
– concomitant coronary atherosclerosis
– coronary obstruction caused by coronary embolization
Palpitations and Embolic Events
• Patients with AF often are initially diagnosed
when they present with AF or an embolic
event.
Other Symptoms
• Compression of the left recurrent laryngeal nerve by a greatly
dilated left atrium, enlarged tracheobronchial lymph nodes, and
dilated pulmonary artery may cause hoarseness (Ortner syndrome).
• repeated hemoptysis with pulmonary hemosiderosis.
• Systemic venous hypertension, hepatomegaly, edema, ascites, and
hydrothorax are all signs of severe MS with elevated pulmonary
vascular resistance and right-sided heart failure.
Physical Examination
• irregular pulse caused by AF and signs of left and right heart
failure
• systemic vasoconstriction may exhibit the so-called mitral
facies, characterized by pinkish-purple patches on the cheeks
• The arterial pulse is usually normal, but in patients with a
reduced stroke volume, the pulse may be low in volume.
• The jugular venous pulse usually exhibits a prominent a wave in patients with sinus rhythm and elevated pulmonary vascular resistance.
• In patients with AF, the x descent of the jugular venous pulse disappears, and there is only one crest, a prominent v or c-v wave, per cardiac cycle.
• Palpation of the cardiac apex usually reveals an inconspicuous left
ventricle; the presence of a palpable presystolic expansion wave or an
early diastolic rapid filling wave speaks strongly against serious MS.
• A readily palpable, tapping S1 suggests that the anterior mitral valve
leaflet is pliable.
• When the patient is in the left lateral recumbent position, a diastolic
thrill of MS may be palpable at the apex.
• RV lift is felt in the left parasternal region in patients with
pulmonary hypertension.
• A markedly enlarged right ventricle may displace the left
ventricle posteriorly and produce a prominent RV apex beat
that can be confused with a LV lift.
• A loud P2 may be palpable in the second left intercostal space
in patients with MS and pulmonary hypertension.
Auscultation
• accentuated S1
• As pulmonary arterial pressure rises, P2 at first becomes accentuated and
widely transmitted and can often be readily heard at both the mitral and
the aortic areas.
• With further elevation of pulmonary arterial pressure, splitting of S2
narrows because of reduced compliance of the pulmonary vascular bed,
with earlier pulmonic valve closure.
• Finally, S2 becomes single and accentuated.
• Other signs of severe pulmonary hypertension
– nonvalvular pulmonic ejection sound that diminishes during inspiration,
because of dilation of the pulmonary artery,
– systolic murmur of TR,
– Graham Steell murmur of pulmonic regurgitation,
– S4 originating from the right ventricle.
• An S3 gallop originating from the left ventricle is absent in patients
with MS unless significant MR or AR coexists
• The opening snap (OS) of the mitral valve is caused by a sudden tensing of the
valve leaflets after the valve cusps have completed their opening excursion.
• The OS occurs when the movement of the mitral dome into the left ventricle
suddenly stops.
• The OS can usually be differentiated from P2 because the OS occurs later,
unless right bundle branch block is present.
• In addition, the OS usually is loudest at the apex, whereas S2 is best heard at
the cardiac base.
• The mitral valve cannot be totally rigid if it produces an OS, so an OS
is usually accompanied by an accentuated S1.
• Calcification confined to the tip of the mitral valve leaflets does not
preclude an OS, although calcification of the body and tip does.
• The mitral OS follows A2 by 0.04 to 0.12 second; this interval varies
inversely with the left atrial pressure.
• A short A2-OS interval is a reliable indicator of severe MS
• The diastolic, low-pitched, rumbling murmur of MS is best heard at the
apex, with the bell of the stethoscope (low-frequency mode on electronic
stethoscopes) and with the patient in the left lateral recumbent position.
• When this murmur is soft, it is limited to the apex but, when louder, it
may radiate to the left axilla or the lower left sternal area.
• Although the intensity of the diastolic murmur is not closely related to the
severity of stenosis, the duration of the murmur is a guide to the severity
of mitral valve narrowing.
• The murmur persists for as long as the left atrioventricular
pressure gradient exceeds approximately 3 mm Hg.
• The murmur usually commences immediately after the OS.
• In mild MS, the early diastolic murmur is brief but, in the
presence of sinus rhythm, it resumes in presystole.
• In severe MS, the murmur persists until end-diastole, with
presystolic accentuation while sinus rhythm is maintained.
Differential Diagnosis
• rare diagnosis in developed countries
• In older patients - mitral annular calcification
• Left atrial myxoma
• HOCM
Radiography
• left atrial enlargement
• Extreme left atrial enlargement rarely occurs in
isolated MS - when present, MR is usually severe
• fluoroscopy is required to detect valvular calcification.
• Radiologic changes in the lung fields indirectly reflect
the severity of MS.
• Interstitial edema, an indication of severe obstruction, is manifested as Kerley
B lines (dense, short, horizontal lines most commonly seen in the costophrenic
angles).
• This finding is present in 30% of patients with resting pulmonary arterial
wedge pressures less than 20 mm Hg and in 70% of patients with pressures
greater than 20 mm Hg.
• Severe long-standing mitral obstruction often results in Kerley A lines (straight,
dense lines up to 4 cm in length, running toward the hilum), as well as the
findings of pulmonary hemosiderosis and rarely of parenchymal ossification.
• Kerley B lines • subpleural
perpendicular lines 1-3 cm in length
Calcification in the mitral ring(lateral view )
Electrocardiography
• Relatively insensitive for detecting mild MS
• shows characteristic changes in moderate or severe obstruction
• Left atrial enlargement (P wave duration in lead II >0.12 second
and/or a P wave axis between +45 and −30 degrees) is a
principal electrocardiographic feature of MS and is found in
90% of patients with significant MS and sinus rhythm.
• AF is common with long-standing MS.
• Electrocardiographic evidence of RV hypertrophy correlates with RV systolic
pressure.
• When RV systolic pressure is 70 to 100 mm Hg, approximately 50% of patients
manifest ECG criteria for RV hypertrophy, including a mean QRS axis greater
than 80 degrees in the frontal plane and an R:S ratio greater than 1 in lead V1.
• When RV systolic pressure is greater than 100 mm Hg in patients with isolated
or predominant MS, electrocardiographic evidence of RV hypertrophy is
consistently found.
Echocardiography • characteristic anatomy with leaflet thickening and restriction of
opening caused by symmetric fusion of the commissures, resulting
in “doming” of the leaflets in diastole
• As disease becomes more severe, thickening extends from the
leaflet tips toward the base with further restriction of motion and
less curvature of the leaflet in diastole.
• The mitral chords are variably thickening, fused, and shortened
and there may be superimposed calcification of the valve apparatus
• A score of 0 to 4+ is given for leaflet thickness, mobility,
calcification, and chordal involvement to provide an overall
score that is favorable (low) or unfavorable (high) for
valvuloplasty
• degree of anterior leaflet doming, symmetry of commissural
fusion, and distribution of leaflet calcification.
• left atrial size, pulmonary artery pressures, LV size and systolic
function, and RV size and systolic function.
• When pulmonary hypertension is present, the right
ventricle is frequently dilated, with reduced systolic
function.
• TR may be secondary to RV dysfunction and annular
dilation or may be caused by rheumatic involvement of
the tricuspid valve.
• Complete evaluation of aortic valve anatomy and
function is also important because the aortic valve is
affected in approximately one third of patients with MS.
• When transthoracic images are suboptimal, TEE is
appropriate.
• TEE is also necessary to exclude left atrial thrombus and
evaluate MR severity when percutaneous BMV is considered.
Characteristic Changes
• thickening at the leaflet edges, fusion of the commissures,
and chordal shortening and fusion.
commissural fusion that results in doming of the leaflets in the long-axis view and in a decrease in the width of the mitral orifice in the short-axis view.
M-mode echocardiogram - marked thickening of the mitral valve leaflets and the flat E-F slope during diastole.
the diffuse thickening of the mitral leaflets with the doming motion in diastole with diffuse thickening of the chordae
Exercise Testing with Doppler Echocardiography
• Exercise testing is useful for many patients with MS to ascertain the
level of physical conditioning and elicit covert cardiac symptoms.
• The exercise test can be combined with Doppler echocardiography to
assess exercise pulmonary pressure.
• Useful parameters on exercise testing include the following: (1) exercise
duration; (2) blood pressure and heart rate response; and (3) increase
in pulmonary pressures with exercise, compared with the expected
normal changes.
Cardiac Catheterization
• Catheter-based measurement of left atrial and LV pressures
• allows measurement of the mean transmitral pressure
gradient and, in conjunction with measurement of
transmitral volume flow rate, calculation of the valve area
using the Gorlin formula
• Routine diagnostic cardiac catheterization is not
recommended for the evaluation of MS.
Complications :- Atrial Fibrillation • The most common complication of MS is AF
• AF may precipitate or worsen symptoms caused by loss of the
atrial contribution to filling and to a short diastolic filling
period when the ventricular rate is not well controlled.
• predisposes to left atrial thrombus formation and systemic
embolic events.
• conveys a worse overall prognosis
Systemic Embolism
• caused by left atrial thrombus formation.
• most often occurs in patients with AF
• When embolization occurs in patients in sinus rhythm, the possibility
of transient AF or underlying infective endocarditis should be
considered.
• loss of atrial appendage contractile function, despite electrical
evidence of sinus rhythm, leads to blood flow stasis and thrombus
formation.
Infective Endocarditis
• MS is a predisposing factor for endocarditis in less than 1% of
cases in clinical series of bacterial endocarditis.
• The estimated risk of endocarditis in patients with MS is
0.17/1000 patient-years, which is much lower than the risk in
patients with MR or aortic valve disease.
Medical Treatment
• The medical management of MS is primarily directed
toward the following:
– (1) prevention of recurrent rheumatic fever;
– (2) prevention and treatment of complications of MS; and
– (3) monitoring disease progression to allow intervention at
the optimal time point.
• Patients with MS caused by rheumatic heart disease should
receive penicillin prophylaxis for beta-hemolytic
streptococcal infections to prevent recurrent rheumatic
fever
• Prophylaxis for infective endocarditis is no longer
recommended
• Anemia and infections should be treated promptly and
aggressively in patients with valvular heart disease.
• Anticoagulant therapy is indicated for prevention of systemic embolism
in MS patients with AF (persistent or paroxysmal), any prior embolic
events (even if in sinus rhythm), and documented left atrial thrombus.
• Anticoagulation also may be considered for patients with severe MS
and sinus rhythm when there is severe left atrial enlargement
(diameter >55 mm) or spontaneous contrast on echocardiography.
• Treatment with warfarin is used to maintain the international
normalized ratio (INR) between 2 and 3.
• Asymptomatic patients with mild to moderate rheumatic mitral
valve disease should have a history and physical examination
annually, with echocardiography every 3 to 5 years for mild
stenosis, every 1 to 2 years for moderate stenosis, and annually for
severe stenosis.
• More frequent evaluation is appropriate for any change in signs or
symptoms.
• All patients with significant MS should be advised to avoid
occupations requiring strenuous exertion.
• In patients with severe MS, with persistent symptoms after
intervention or when intervention is not possible, medical
therapy with oral diuretics and the restriction of sodium
intake may improve symptoms.
• Digitalis glycosides - slowing the ventricular rate in patients
with AF and in treating patients with right-sided heart failure.
• Hemoptysis is managed by measures designed to reduce
pulmonary venous pressure, including sedation, assumption
of the upright position, and aggressive diuresis.
Treatment of Arrhythmias • Immediate treatment of AF includes administration of intravenous heparin
followed by oral warfarin.
• The ventricular rate should be slowed, initially with an intravenous beta
blocker or calcium channel antagonist, followed by long-term rate control with
oral doses of these agents.
• When these medications are ineffective or when additional rate control is
necessary, digoxin or amiodarone may be considered.
• Digoxin alone for long-term management of AF may be considered in patients
with concurrent LV dysfunction or a sedentary lifestyle.
• Paroxysmal AF and repeated conversions, spontaneous or induced, carry the
risk of embolization.
• In patients who cannot be converted or maintained in sinus rhythm, digitalis
should be used to maintain the ventricular rate at rest at approximately 60
beats/min.
• If this is not possible, small doses of a beta-blocking agent, such as atenolol
(25 mg daily) or metoprolol (50 to 100 mg daily), may be added.
• Beta blockers are particularly helpful in preventing rapid ventricular responses
that develop during exertion.
• Multiple repeat cardioversions are not indicated if the patient fails to
sustain sinus rhythm while on adequate doses of an antiarrhythmic.
• Patients with chronic AF who undergo surgical MV repair or MV
replacement may undergo the maze procedure (atrial compartment
operation).
• Early intervention with percutaneous valvotomy may prevent the
development of AF.
Percutaneous Balloon Mitral Valvotomy
• Patients with mild to moderate MS who are asymptomatic frequently
remain so for years, and clinical outcomes are similar to age-matched
normal patients.
• However, severe or symptomatic MS is associated with poor long-term
outcomes if the stenosis is not relieved mechanically
• Percutaneous BMV is the procedure of choice for the treatment of MS
so that surgical intervention is now reserved for patients who require
intervention and are not candidates for a percutaneous procedure.
• BMV is recommended for symptomatic patients with – moderate to severe MS – with favorable valve morphology– no or mild MR– no evidence of left atrial thrombus.
• recommended for asymptomatic patients with– moderate to severe MS– when mitral valve obstruction has resulted in pulmonary hypertension
with a pulmonary systolic pressure greater than 50 mm Hg at rest or 60 mm Hg with exercise.
• BMV also is reasonable for symptomatic patients who are at
high risk for surgery, even when valve morphology is not ideal,
including patients with restenosis after a previous BMV or
previous commissurotomy who are unsuitable for surgery
because of very high risk.
• BMV may be considered for patients with moderate to severe
MS and new-onset AF and those with mild MS when
significant pulmonary hypertension is present .
• This percutaneous technique consists of advancing a small balloon
flotation catheter across the interatrial septum (after transseptal
puncture), enlarging the opening, advancing a large (23- to 25-mm)
hourglass-shaped balloon (the Inoue balloon), and inflating it within
the orifice
• Alternatively, two smaller (15- to 20-mm) side by side balloons across
the mitral orifice may be used.
• A third technique involves retrograde, nontransseptal dilation of the
mitral valve, in which the balloon is positioned across the mitral valve
using a steerable guidewire.