If the mitral valve isn't working well, you may need it fixed or replaced. Fixing the mitral valve is often possible. But sometimes it must be replaced.
Mitral valve stenosis and mitral valve regurgitation (also known as mitral valve insufficiency) are two different types of problems that might need valve replacement.
- Mitral valve stenosis. The valve can't open fully. This means less blood is able to move from the left atria into the left ventricle.
- Mitral valve regurgitation. The valve is leaky. Some blood leaks back into the left atrium instead of moving forward into the left ventricle.
These problems can lead to symptoms like severe tiredness (fatigue), shortness of breath, fluid buildup in the legs (edema), fluid buildup in the lungs (pulmonary edema), and heart palpitations. If these symptoms are severe, or if the valve is severely damaged, you may need valve repair or replacement.
Both mitral stenosis and mitral regurgitation can result from general aging of the valve. Other causes of mitral valve disease include:
- Coronary artery disease.
- Infection of the heart valves.
- Heart failure.
- Rheumatic fever.
- Congenital heart defect (something you are born with).