Rheumatic Mitral Stenosis – Key Echocardiographic Assessment Points 1) Morphologic Features (2D Echo – Parasternal & Apical Views) • Thickened mitral leaflets (especially leaflet tips) • Diastolic doming of anterior leaflet (“hockey stick” appearance) • Commissural fusion (best seen in parasternal short axis) • Reduced leaflet mobility • Subvalvular involvement: chordal thickening, fusion, shortening • Calcification (late disease) Rheumatic MS typically shows leaflet tip restriction with relatively preserved basal leaflet mobility (early disease). --- 2) Mitral Valve Area (MVA) – Severity Assessment • Planimetry (PSAX at leaflet tips in mid-diastole) – Gold standard if image quality good • Pressure Half-Time (PHT method): MVA = 220 / PHT • Continuity equation (if significant MR absent) Severity grading: • Mild: MVA > 1.5 cm² • Moderate: 1.0–1.5 cm² • Severe: < 1.0 cm² • Very severe: ≤ 0.8 cm² Always prefer planimetry when feasible. --- 3) Transmitral Doppler Assessment • Mean...
Dr. Usman's Cardiology Notes
Cardiology Notes: Clinical Cases including ECG, Echocardiography, Cath, and MOCK Exams to sharpen your cardiology data interpretation skills. Healthcare is stressful!!! Learning cardiology shouldn't be !!!