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Bicycle Exercise Echocardiography to Assess Physiological Significance of Mitral Annular Calcification

A

Albert Einstein Healthcare Network

Status

Completed

Conditions

Mitral Annulus Calcification

Treatments

Diagnostic Test: bicycle stress echocardiography

Study type

Observational

Funder types

Other
Industry

Identifiers

NCT04093973
HN:4649

Details and patient eligibility

About

Many people develop calcium deposits in the heart as they get older. One of the common places for this to occur is the mitral annulus, the band of tissue that supports the mitral valve (one of four heart valves). The purpose of this study is to examine effects of these deposits (termed mitral annular calcification or "MAC") on a person's ability to perform exercise. The research team will use ultrasound of the heart (Doppler echocardiography) to study people with MAC while they exercise on a specially designed bicycle.

Full description

Mitral annular calcification (MAC) involves build-up of calcium in the mitral annulus, the fibro-muscular band which supports the mitral valve. The annulus aids in valve function, contracting in early systole (contraction phase) and bringing the valve leaflets together. In diastole (filling phase) it enlarges allowing blood to flow freely across the valve. Calcification stiffens the annulus and can extend onto the valve leaflets stiffening them. When severe, MAC impairs flow across the valve (mitral stenosis). This is characterized by a pressure gradient across the valve which can be detected by Doppler echocardiography (ultrasound).

Routine Doppler echocardiography is performed at rest when heart rates and flow across the mitral valve are low. Thus, even with severe MAC, there may only be a small pressure gradient present. However, with exercise these gradients can rise rapidly, leading to symptoms such as fatigue and shortness of breath.

MAC is associated with aging and is becoming more prevalent. Our hypothesis is that MAC is a common cause of shortness of breath with exertion. Further, the investigator believes this is under-appreciated because routine Doppler echocardiograms are done at rest. Therefore, the investigator will study adult subjects with moderate to severe MAC during bicycle exercise. Doppler echocardiography will be used to measure both the resting gradient across the mitral valve and changes with exercise. Symptoms will be measured by Borg Perceived Exertion scale.

If the research team is successful, the research team expects to demonstrate convincingly that this commonly encountered finding on Doppler echocardiography is an important cause of patient symptoms.

Enrollment

40 patients

Sex

All

Ages

18+ years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • At least moderate mitral annular calcification as judged by a previously published semi-quantitative echocardiographic score
  • Over 18 years of age
  • Able to use the semi-supine exercise bicycle
  • Should be able to give informed consent.

Exclusion criteria

  • Oxygen dependent lung or cardiac disease
  • Moderate or greater aortic valvular disease
  • Moderate or greater mitral regurgitation
  • Reduced left ventricular ejection fraction, <35%
  • Any diagnosed coronary disease
  • A resting mean gradient of ≥10 mmHg across the mitral valve.

Trial design

40 participants in 2 patient groups

MAC subjects
Description:
Outpatients with moderate to severe mitral annular calcification on echocardiogram who are able to perform supine bicycle exercise.
Treatment:
Diagnostic Test: bicycle stress echocardiography
Controls
Description:
Sex matched individuals who are within 5 years of age of the paired MAC subject and who have the same left ventricular wall thickness as measured by echocardiography.
Treatment:
Diagnostic Test: bicycle stress echocardiography

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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