Cardiac > Valve > TV

Tricuspid Valve Disease:

Clinical:

The tricuspid vale is a trileaflet structure (septal, anterior, and posterior cusps) and consists of three papillary muscles [3].

Etiologies of tricuspid valve disease include: 1- Late stage rheumatic heart disease-  may produce either stenosis (rheumatic heart disease is the most common cause of tricuspid stenosis [2]) or incompetence and is almost always associated with mitral valve disease); 2- Carcinoid syndrome (stenosis); and 3- Bacterial endocarditis (IV drug users). Clinically, patients have an enlarged pulsatile liver and increased jugular venous pressures. Doppler echocardiographic findings that are indicative of a hemodynamically significant stenosis include a mean pressure gradient of more than 5 mm Hg, an inflow time-velocity integral greater than 60 cm a pressure half-time greater than 190 msec, and a valve area by continuity equation of less than 1 cm2 [4]. On CXR there is right atrial enlargement.

Tricuspid insufficiency is most commonly secondary to dilatation of the RV and tricuspid annulus with streching of the leaflets- typically in response to elevated pulmonary arterial pressures [2].

The tricuspid valve is typically difficult to visualize by CT because of the relatively thin leaflet structure and contrast mixing artifacts [3].

REFERENCES:
(1) Radiologic Clinics of North America 1999; Lipton MJ, Coulden R. Valvular heart disease. 37(2): 319-339

(2) Radiographics 2009; Chen JJ, et al. CT angiography of the cardiac valves: normal, diseased, and postoperative appearances. 29: 1393-1412

(3) J Cardiovasc Comput Tomogr 2012; Buttan Ak, et al. Evaluation of valvular heart disease by cardiac computed tomography assessment. 6: 381-392

(4) Radiographics 2015; Malik SB, et al. The right atrium: gateway to the heart- anatomic and pathologic imaging findings. 35: 14-31

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