Background: Procedures on the subvalvular apparatus are an etiology-based treatment for ischemic mitral regurgitation (IMR).
Methods and results: Fifty-nine patients with IMR were divided into 3 groups: mitral annuloplasty (MAP) (M group, n=27), MAP+left ventricular reconstruction (LVR) (LV group, n=18), and MAP+LVR+subvalvular procedure (S group, n=14). Tenting height and area, angle between the annular line and the line connecting leaflet base to the bending- or tip-point of either the anterior or posterior leaflet, and leaflet mobility were measured echocardiographically preoperatively and at immediate- and mid-term postoperative follow-up. The angles at the bending-point of the anterior leaflet in mid-systole remained greater than those at its tip-point in the M and LV groups, but became significantly smaller postoperatively only in the S group (p<0.05). Postoperative leaflet mobility at the bending-point in the S group became significantly greater than in the other groups (p<0.01). The grade of MR, after significant reduction by the procedure, increased again in the M and LV groups, but remained almost unchanged in the S group.
Conclusion: Subvalvular procedures improved the configuration and mobility of the anterior leaflet, and can be expected to reduce the recurrence of IMR.