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Diseases and Conditions
9339
valve problems
Reviewed by the Faculty of Harvard Medical School
Heart Valve Problems
  • What Is It?
  • Symptoms
  • Diagnosis
  • Expected Duration
  • Prevention
  • Treatment
  • When to Call a Professional
  • Prognosis
  • Additional Info
  • What Is It?

    The heart has four valves: the aortic, mitral, tricuspid and pulmonary valves. Like valves used in house plumbing, the heart valves open to allow fluid (blood) to be pumped forward, and they close to prevent fluid from flowing backward. Human heart valves are flaps of tissue called leaflets or cusps.

    Heart valve problems fall into two major categories:

    Heart valve problems can be congenital, which means present at birth, or acquired after birth. A heart valve problem is classified as congenital when some factor during fetal development causes the valve to form abnormally. Congenital heart valve disease affects about 1 in 1,000 newborns. Most of these infants have stenosis of either the pulmonary or the aortic valve.

    Most of the time, a specific reason for the congenital heart valve problem cannot be determined. However, researchers believe that many cases are caused by genetic (inherited) factors. This is because there is a higher risk of valve abnormalities in the parents and siblings of affected newborns, compared with the overall risk in the general population. Sometimes, the heart defect is related to health or environmental factors that affected the mother during pregnancy. These factors include diabetes, phenylketonuria, rubella infection, systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE or lupus) or drugs taken by the mother (alcohol, lithium, certain seizure medications).

    A heart valve problem is acquired if it occurs in a valve that was structurally normal at birth. Some common causes of acquired heart valve problems include:

    Heart valve problems affect each valve in a slightly different way.

    Aortic Valve
    The aortic valve opens to allow blood to pass from the left ventricle to the aorta, the massive blood vessel that directs oxygenated blood from the heart to the rest of the body. Disorders of this valve include:

    Aortic valve problems in adults are more common in men than women.

    Mitral Valve
    The mitral valve opens to allow blood to pass from the left atrium to the left ventricle. Disorders of this valve include:

    Pulmonary Valve
    The pulmonary valve, or pulmonic valve, is located between the right ventricle and the pulmonary artery. It allows oxygen-poor blood to flow from the right side of the heart to the lungs for oxygenation. Disorders of this valve include:

    Tricuspid Valve
    The tricuspid valve allows blood to flow from the right atrium to the right ventricle. Disorders of this valve include:

    Symptoms

    Many people with mild heart valve problems do not have any symptoms, and the abnormal valve is discovered only when a heart murmur is heard during a physical examination. For more severe heart valve problems, symptoms vary slightly depending on which valve is involved.

    Diagnosis

    If you are having symptoms, your doctor will begin by evaluating your risk of heart valve problems. Your doctor will ask questions about your family history of heart problems; your personal history of rheumatic fever, syphilis, hypertension, arteriosclerosis or connective tissue disorders; and your risk of endocarditis caused by intravenous (IV) drug use or a recent medical or dental procedure. If the patient is an infant, the doctor will ask about the mother's health or environmental risk factors during pregnancy.

    Your doctor may suspect that you have a heart valve problem based on your specific symptoms and medical history. To support the diagnosis, your doctor will examine you, paying special attention to your heart. Your doctor will evaluate the size of your heart (to check for enlargement) and use a stethoscope to listen for heart murmurs. Because specific heart valve problems produce specific types of heart murmurs, your doctor often can make a tentative diagnosis based on your murmur's distinctive sound and whether the murmur occurs when the heart is pumping or resting.

    To confirm the diagnosis of a heart valve problem and to evaluate its effects on your heart, your doctor will order diagnostic tests. These may include an electrocardiogram (EKG), a chest X-ray, blood tests to check for infection in patients with suspected endocarditis, an echocardiogram, Doppler echocardiography and cardiac catheterization.

    In people who do not have any symptoms, diagnostic testing may become necessary after your doctor discovers a new heart murmur during a routine physical exam.

    Expected Duration

    In general, heart valve problems persist throughout life and may gradually worsen with time. Those caused by endocarditis sometimes may produce severe symptoms and rapid deterioration within a few days.

    Prevention

    There is no way to prevent the majority of congenital heart valve problems. Pregnant women should have regularly scheduled prenatal care and should avoid using alcohol.

    You can prevent many acquired heart valve abnormalities by preventing rheumatic fever. To do this, take antibiotics exactly as prescribed whenever you have strep throat.

    Treatment

    If you have a mild heart valve problem without any symptoms, your doctor may simply monitor your condition. Researchers are studying whether the medications called statins may slow the progression of aortic stenosis, but there is not yet any evidence that these drugs decrease the need for surgery.

    If you have moderate or severe symptoms, your treatment will be determined by the severity of your symptoms and the results of diagnostic tests. Although your doctor can give you medications to temporarily treat symptoms such as angina, cardiac arrhythmias and heart failure, you eventually may need to have the abnormal valve repaired or replaced. This can be done in several different ways:

    When to Call a Professional

    Call your doctor immediately if you begin to experience any symptoms that may be related to a heart problem, especially shortness of breath, chest pain, rapid or irregular heartbeat, or fainting spells.

    If you have been diagnosed with a heart valve problem, ask your doctor whether you are at risk of endocarditis. If so, you will need to take antibiotics before undergoing any medical or dental procedure in which bacteria may enter your blood and infect your abnormal valve.

    Prognosis

    Among patients who undergo surgical treatments for heart valve problems, the major risks occur during and immediately after surgery. After that, the outlook is usually excellent. People that have had surgery are at much higher risk of developing an infection on the heart valve (endocarditis) throughout life.

    Additional Info

    American Heart Association (AHA)
    7272 Greenville Ave.
    Dallas, TX 75231
    Toll-Free: 1-800-242-8721
    http://www.americanheart.org/

    National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute (NHLBI)
    P.O. Box 30105
    Bethesda, MD 20824-0105
    Phone: 301-592-8573
    TTY: 240-629-3255
    Fax: 301-592-8563
    http://www.nhlbi.nih.gov/

    American College of Cardiology
    Heart House
    9111 Old Georgetown Road
    Bethesda, MD 20814-1699
    Phone: 301-897-5400
    Toll-Free: 1-800-253-4636, ext. 694
    http://www.acc.org/

    Last updated December 19, 2011

       
    Heart Valve Problems
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    Heart valve problems fall into two categories: stenosis or regurgitation.
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    InteliHealth
    2011-12-19
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    InteliHealth Medical Content
    2011-01-12
    23659, 23704, 28040,
    heart,congenital,heart valve problems,endocarditis,rheumatic fever,heart valve,aortic valve,heart failure,aortic regurgitation,aortic stenosis,mitral valve,pulmonary,surgery,mitral regurgitation,ventricle,arrhythmias,heart murmur,left ventricle,mitral
    23659