1. A morphological study of the normally aging heart.
- Author
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Kouji Chida, Shin-Ichiro Ohkawa, Chizuko Watanabe, Hiroyuki Shimada, Kohichiro Ohtsubo, and Masaya Sugiura
- Abstract
A morphological examination of aging was performed on 141 normal hearts selected from a total of 972 consecutive autopsies on persons aged 60 years or over. The average heart weight was 270 ± 41 g. The circumference of the valvular ring was 99 ± 10 mm in the tricuspid valve, 68 ± 8 mm in the pulmonic valve, 83 ± 10 mm in the mitral valve, and 73 ± 7 mm in the aortic valve. The thickness of the tricuspid valve (anterior leaflet) was 0.9 ± 0.3 mm, pulmonic (anterior cusp) 0.4 ± 0.3 mm, mitral (anterior leaflet) 1.3 ± 0.6 mm, and aortic (posterior cusp) 1.0 ± 0.6 mm. Cardiac chamber volumes were as follows: 40 ± 14 mL in the right atrium, 22 ± 7 mL in the right ventricle, 37 ± 12 mL in the left atrium, and 7.3 ± 3.4 mL in the left ventricle. The circumference of the tricuspid ring was the largest. Left-sided valves were thicker than right-sides valves, and atrioventricular valves were thicker than semilunar valves. Cardiac chamber volumes were generally larger on the right side. Because this study was limited to hearts from persons aged 60 years or over, age-related changes were observed in only four parameters: (i) the circumference of the aortic valvular ring, (ii) the thickness of the aortic posterior cusp, (iii) the thickness of the pulmonic anterior cusp, and (iv) the volume of the left ventricle. With increasing age the aortic valvular ring dilated, the aortic posterior cusp and the pulmonic anterior cusp thickened, and the left ventricular volume diminished., (Copyright © 1994. Published by Elsevier Inc.)
- Published
- 1994
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