The goals of mitral valve regurgitation treatment are to:
- Help the heart work better.
- Reduce symptoms.
- Prevent complications.
Some people, especially those with mild regurgitation, might not need treatment. Your health care team considers your symptoms and stage of regurgitation, among other things, when planning treatment.
Treatment of mitral valve regurgitation may include:
- Healthy lifestyle changes.
- Regular health checkups.
- Medicines to treat symptoms and prevent complications, such as blood clots.
- Surgery to repair or replace the mitral valve.
A doctor trained in heart diseases typically provides care for people with mitral valve regurgitation. This type of health care professional is called a cardiologist.
If you have mitral valve regurgitation, consider being treated at a medical center with a multidisciplinary team of health care professionals trained and experienced in evaluating and treating heart valve disease.
Medications
Medicines may be needed to reduce mitral valve regurgitation symptoms and to prevent complications of heart valve disease.
Types of medicines that may be used for mitral valve regurgitation include:
- Water pills, also called diuretics. This medicine reduces or prevents fluid buildup in the lungs and other parts of the body.
- Blood thinners, also called anticoagulants. If you have atrial fibrillation due to mitral valve disease, such as mitral valve regurgitation, your health care team may recommend these medicines to prevent blood clots. Atrial fibrillation increases the risk of blood clots and stroke.
- Blood pressure medicines. High blood pressure makes mitral valve regurgitation worse. If you have mitral valve regurgitation and high blood pressure, you may be given medicines to lower blood pressure.
Surgery or other procedures
A diseased or damaged mitral valve might eventually need to be repaired or replaced, even if you don't have symptoms. Surgery for mitral valve disease includes mitral valve repair and mitral valve replacement. Your health care team discusses the risks and benefits of each type of heart valve with you to determine which valve may be best for you.
If you need surgery for another heart condition, a surgeon might perform mitral valve repair or replacement at the same time as that other surgery.
Mitral valve surgery is usually done through a cut in the chest. Surgeons at some medical centers sometimes use robot-assisted heart surgery, a minimally invasive procedure in which robotic arms are used to do the surgery.
Mitral valve repair
Mitral valve repair saves the existing valve and may save heart function. Whenever possible, mitral valve repair is recommended before considering valve replacement. People who have mitral valve repair for mitral regurgitation at an experienced medical center generally have good outcomes.
During mitral valve repair surgery, the surgeon might:
- Patch holes in a heart valve.
- Reconnect the valve flaps.
- Remove excess tissue from the valve so that the flaps can close tightly.
- Repair the structure of the mitral valve by replacing cords that support it.
- Separate valve leaflets that have connected.
Other mitral valve repair procedures include:
- Annuloplasty. A surgeon tightens or reinforces the ring around the valve, called the annulus. Annuloplasty may be done with other techniques to repair a heart valve.
- Valvuloplasty. This treatment is used to repair a mitral valve with a narrowed opening. It might be done even if you don't have symptoms. It's done using a thin tube called a catheter with a balloon on the tip. The surgeon inserts the tube into an artery in the arm or groin and guides it to the mitral valve. The balloon is inflated, widening the mitral valve opening. The balloon is then deflated, and the catheter and balloon are removed.
- Mitral valve clip. In this treatment, a doctor guides a catheter with a clip on its end to the mitral valve through an artery in the groin. The clip is used to improve the closure of the mitral valve leaflets. It reduces the amount of regurgitation. This procedure is an option for people who have severe mitral valve regurgitation or who aren't good candidates for mitral valve surgery.
Mitral valve replacement
During mitral valve replacement, the surgeon removes the mitral valve. It's replaced with a mechanical valve or a valve made from cow, pig or human heart tissue. A tissue valve also is called a biological tissue valve.
Sometimes, a heart catheter procedure is done to put a replacement valve into a biological tissue valve that no longer works well. This is called a valve-in-valve procedure.
If you had mitral valve replacement with a mechanical valve, you need to take blood thinners for life to prevent blood clots. Biological tissue valves break down over time and usually need to be replaced.