Kumar P D
Department of Medicine, Meridia Huron Hospital, East Cleveland, Ohio 44112, USA.
Med Hypotheses. 2000 Feb;54(2):189-92. doi: 10.1054/mehy.1999.0016.
The exact aetiology of mitral valve prolapse (MVP) is unknown, although this is the most common cardiac valvular abnormality currently detected. MVP has high incidence in young individuals, particularly during the second and third decades. These individuals are usually of a slender body habitus indicating higher rates of linear growth, reflective of the adolescent growth spurt. MVP might represent the imbalance in the growth dynamics of the mitral valve apparatus especially between the leaflets, chordae tendineae and the rest of the heart. Several reports suggest the transient nature of MVP and even complete disappearance. MVP with systolic click, but without a systolic murmur signifying regurgitation may be considered as a manifestation of adolescent growth spurt and a normal variant transiently occurring during particular periods of lives of otherwise normal individuals. Strategies of identification of subsets of individuals likely to harbor the more sinister and progressive form of MVP are important and need to be developed.