Abstract

Whether percutaneous balloon commissurotomy reduces cerebral stroke in patients with symptomatic rheumatic mitral stenosis remains obscure. This study enrolled 170 such patients undergoing either medical therapy alone ( n = 71) or balloon commissurotomy ( n = 99). In the short term, balloon commissurotomy was successfully accomplished in 99% patients without embolic complications. At follow-up (mean 4.2 ± 3.2 years), patients undergoing commissurotomy encountered significantly rarer ischemic stroke than the medicine group (2% vs. 13%, p = 0.043). Multivariate Cox regression analysis further confirmed balloon commissurotomy as a negative predictor for ischemic stroke (hazard ratio 0.135, p = 0.011). These results lead to the conclusion that percutaneous balloon commissurotomy could substantially decrease the long-term incidence of ischemic cerebral stroke in eligible patients with symptomatic rheumatic mitral stenosis.

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