The Clinical Course in Muscular Subaortic Stenosis
A Retrospective and Prospective Study of 60 Hemodynamically Proved Cases
- A. G. ADELMAN, M.D.;
- E. D. WIGLE, M.D., F.A.C.P.;
- N. RANGANATHAN, M.B.B.S.;
- G. D. WEBB, M.D.;
- B. S. L. KIDD, M.D.;
- W. G. BIGELOW, M.D.; and
- M. D. SILVER, M.B.B.S., Ph.D.
Abstract
A retrospective and prospective analysis of the clinical course of 60 hemodynamically proved cases of muscular subaortic stenosis showed that in 41 (68%) the murmur was the first evidence of the disease. Fifty-six of the 60 patients (93%) developed symptoms (Class II, New York Heart Association) an average of 10 years after the murmur was first heard, and 40 (66%) deteriorated to Class III-IV an average of 5 years after the onset of symptoms. Of 28 untreated or propranolol-treated patients, 4 (14%) died of the disease. This experience indicates that muscular subaortic stenosis is a progressive disease once symptoms start. Most patients experienced symptomatic improvement with propranolol therapy. However, only 25% of Class III-IV patients with left ventricular outflow tract obstruction at rest maintained this improvement into the second year of therapy, whereas 75% of patients in Class III-IV who underwent ventriculomyotomy have had sustained symptomatic improvement.
Article and Author Information
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▸From the Toronto Department of Medicine, Surgery and Pathology, Toronto General Hospital; Department of Cardiology, Hospital for Sick Children; and the University of Toronto; Toronto, Ontario, Canada.
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Supported by the Ontario Heart Foundation, Toronto, Ontario, Canada.
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▸Requests for reprints should be addressed to Allan G. Adelman, M.D., Cardiovascular Unit, Toronto General Hospital, 101 College St., Toronto 101, Ontario, Canada.
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- Received February 7, 1972.
- Accepted June 15, 1972.
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