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This study aimed to assess the prevalence of “silent” valvar regurgitation in healthy Brazilian children; to determine whether variations in the gain settings of the machine interfered with its documentation; and to compare Doppler color flow mapping with the pulsed wave Doppler. Twenty-five healthy children were selected randomly. Echocardiographic equipment used was ALOKA 870. Fixed parameters were 3.5 MHz transducer, 400 Hz filter, reject of 7/14 and aperture of 30/80. Variable parameters were Doppler color flow mapping and pulsed wave Doppler gains. A protocol for evaluation of each cardiac valve was developed. Regurgitation was noted in 93% for the pulmonary valve, 74% for the tricuspid valve and 27% for the mitral valve. In the aortic valve, jets suggestive of mild valvar regurgitation were observed with the Doppler color flow mapping technique in two children but these findings were not corroborated by pulsed wave Doppler. Only in the aortic valve were findings from Doppler color flow mapping not in agreement with those from pulsed wave Doppler. Variations in the settings for gain did not interfere significantly in the documentation of regurgitation. Inter-observer variations were not significant (two independent operators). The clinical implications of these findings are yet to be established. Labeling these regurgitant jets as “normal” may be oversimplifying their meaning and perhaps overlooking the possibility of predisposition to endocarditis or progression of the valvar abnormality. Conversely, labeling them as “abnormal” can generate a more serious problem, which is that of iatrogenic heart disease. Prospective follow-up studies should be carried out in these subjects.
We assessed the thickness of the normal left ventricular wall according to gender by performing twodimensional echocardiography in children. While a few studies have evaluated left ventricular wall thicknesses in children using two-dimensional echocardiography, there is little information related to the influence of gender throughout childhood. We evaluated 251 patients (128 males and 123 females) with innocent murmurs but without congenital heart anomalies, or coronary artery lesions or arrhythmias, as determined by repeated echocardiographic, and electrocardiographic examinations. Intra-ventricular septal thicknesses at end-diastole and end-systole, and left ventricular posterior thicknesses at end-diastole and end-systole were determined in the parasternal short-axis view. Significant gender differences were observed in the thickness of all four measurements. There was a linear relationship between the thickness of the left ventricular wall and height. Height was the most appropriate and practical index for assessing the thickness of the wall of the left ventricle in children.
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