Staging
After testing confirms a diagnosis of mitral or other heart valve disease, your health care provider may tell you the stage of disease. Staging helps determine the most appropriate treatment.
The stage of heart valve disease depends on many things, including symptoms, disease severity, the structure of the valve or valves, and blood flow through the heart and lungs.
Heart valve disease is staged into four basic groups:
- Stage A: At risk. Risk factors for heart valve disease are present.
- Stage B: Progressive. Valve disease is mild or moderate. There are no heart valve symptoms.
- Stage C: Asymptomatic severe. There are no heart valve symptoms, but the valve disease is severe.
- Stage D: Symptomatic severe. Heart valve disease is severe and is causing symptoms.
A doctor trained in heart disease typically provides care for people with mitral valve stenosis. This type of provider is called a cardiologist.
If you have mild to moderate mitral valve stenosis with no symptoms, you might not need immediate treatment. Instead, you'll have regular checkups with your provider to see if your condition gets worse.
Treatments for mitral valve stenosis include medications, mitral valve repair or mitral valve replacement, or open-heart surgery.
Medications
Medications are used to reduce the symptoms of mitral valve stenosis.
Your provider might prescribe one or more of the following medications:
- Diuretics to reduce fluid buildup in the lungs or other areas of the body.
- Blood thinners, called anticoagulants, to help prevent blood clots if you have a certain irregular heart rhythm called atrial fibrillation.
- Beta blockers, calcium channel blockers or other heart drugs to slow the heart rate.
- Heart rhythm drugs to treat atrial fibrillation or other irregular heart rhythms. These types of drugs are called anti-arrhythmics.
- Antibiotics to prevent a return of rheumatic fever if that's what damaged the mitral valve.
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. If you need surgery for another heart condition, a surgeon might perform mitral valve repair or replacement at the same time.
Together you and your care provider can discuss the best treatment for you. Surgeries and procedures for mitral valve stenosis may include:
-
Balloon valvuloplasty. This procedure is done to repair a mitral valve with a narrowed opening. It uses a hollow, flexible tube called a catheter and a tiny balloon. The provider inserts the balloon-tipped catheter into an artery, usually in the groin. It's guided to the mitral valve. The balloon is inflated, widening the mitral valve opening. The balloon is deflated. Then the catheter and balloon are removed.
Valvuloplasty might be done even if you don't have symptoms. But not everyone with mitral valve stenosis is a candidate for the procedure. Talk to your provider to decide whether it's an option for you.
This procedure is a type of transcatheter intervention therapy. Other names for the procedure are mitral balloon valvotomy, percutaneous mitral balloon commissurotomy or percutaneous transvenous mitral commissurotomy.
- Open-heart surgery to repair the valve. If a catheter procedure isn't an option, an open-heart surgery called open valvotomy may be done. The surgery also may be called surgical commissurotomy. It removes calcium deposits and other scar tissue blocking the mitral valve opening. The heart must be stopped to prevent bleeding in the chest area during this surgery. A heart-lung machine temporarily takes over the heart's job. The procedure may need to be repeated if mitral valve stenosis returns.
-
Mitral valve replacement. If the mitral valve can't be repaired, surgery may be done to replace the damaged valve. The damage valve is replaced with a mechanical one or a valve made from cow, pig or human heart tissue. A valve made from animal or human tissue is called a biological tissue valve.
Biological tissue valves break down over time and may need to be replaced. People with mechanical valves need lifelong blood thinners to prevent blood clots. Together you and your health care provider should discuss the benefits and risks of each type of valve to choose the best option for you.
The outlook for people who have a procedure or surgery for mitral stenosis is generally good. But older age, poor health, and a lot of calcium buildup on or around the valves increase the risk of surgery complications. Long-term pulmonary hypertension may worsen the prognosis after valve surgery.