Abstract

Between December 1981 and April 1984, five children ranging in age from 1 month to 5 1/2 years examined by two-dimensional echocardiography appeared to have a double orifice mitral valve. The diagnosis was verified in one patient at surgery, one patient by angiography and one patient by necropsy. Associated malformations included mitral stenosis and regurgitation, coarctation of the aorta, ostium primum and secundum atrial septal defect, ventricular septal defect and hypoplastic left heart syndrome. Three varieties of double orifice mitral valve were observed: an incomplete bridge type (one patient), in which a small strand of tissue connected the anterior and posterior leaflets at the leaflet edge level; a complete bridge type (three patients), in which a fibrous bridge divided the atrioventricular orifice completely into equal or unequal parts and a hole type (one patient), in which an additional orifice with subvalvular apparatus occurred in the posterior commissure of the mitral valve. These three types could be distinguished by sweeping the transducer in cross-sectional view from the apex toward the base of the heart. Both orifices could be seen throughout the scan in the complete bridge type while in the incomplete bridge type the two orifices could be seen only at the level of the papillary muscles. In the hole type, the second orifice was seen at about midleaflet level. In all three types, the chordae surrounding each orifice attached to only one papillary muscle. Congenital mitral stenosis or regurgitation was evident in three patients. The type of the double orifice mitral valve did not predict the presence or severity of symptoms.

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