Publication | Closed Access
Highly Acute Course of Ruptured Papillary Muscle of the Tricuspid Valve in a Case of Blunt Chest Trauma
16
Citations
0
References
1993
Year
Heart FailureCardiogenic ShockCardiovascular ImagingBlunt Chest TraumaHighly Acute CourseThoracic SurgeryRuptured Papillary MuscleTricuspid InsufficiencySudden OnsetChest InjuryTraumatic Cardiac ArrestValvular Heart DiseasePublic HealthMedicineCardiologyEmergency MedicineCardiothoracic SurgeryCardiac Arrest
The sudden onset of tricuspid insufficiency following a blunt chest trauma is extremely rare. We operated on a young woman in a state of severe shock following a riding accident, in whom complete severing of the papillary muscle of the posterior tricuspid leaflet had occurred. The valvuloplasty operation itself and the postoperative course ran smoothly, apart from a late pericardial tamponade which required surgical revision. In accordance with other reported cases we believe that traumatic tricuspid insufficiency is still a very underestimated pathological occurrence. Echocardiographic examination should therefore be regarded as an essential standard procedure in all cases of blunt chest injury.