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Tricuspid Valve Leak Leaked Photos & Videos #92f

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A leaky tricuspid valve may make you feel tired and have difficulty exercising

Learn how this type of heart valve disease is diagnosed and treated. What is tricuspid valve regurgitation Tricuspid valve regurgitation is when the door connecting the upper and lower chambers on the right side of your heart doesn't properly close This leaky door allows some blood to flow backward each time your heart beats Tricuspid valve regurgitation is a form of heart valve disease. The tricuspid valve may be repaired during surgery to correct other leaky heart valves

Surgical repair of the tricuspid valve generally works better than replacing it. Learn about tricuspid regurgitation, a condition where blood leaks backward through the tricuspid valve into the right atrium Find out the causes, symptoms, treatment options and prognosis of this heart valve problem. Both relieve symptoms and improve quality of life for people with moderate to severe tricuspid regurgitation, which affects about 4% of people ages 75 and older. A leak in the tricuspid valve can cause problems ranging from a lack of energy to heart failure While surgery is one option to fix a leaky tricuspid valve, minimally invasive devices may offer alternative treatments for patients who can't have surgery.

How tricuspid regurgitation might affect your life depends a lot on how much your valve is leaking, as well as any other heart conditions you have.

The most common cause of tricuspid regurgitation is enlargement of the right ventricle Pressure from heart conditions, such as heart failure, pulmonary hypertension and cardiomyopathy, cause the ventricle to expand The result is a misshapen tricuspid valve that is leaky and cannot close properly. Tricuspid regurgitation happens when the tricuspid valve—which separates the right upper chamber (atrium) from the right lower chamber (ventricle)—doesn't close tightly This allows blood to leak backward into the atrium instead of moving forward into the lungs. The tricuspid valve opens to allow blood from the right atrium to fill the right ventricle and closes to keep blood from flowing back into the right atrium as the right ventricle contracts to pump blood into the lungs

When the tricuspid valve does not close completely, some blood leaks backward into the right atrium, termed regurgitation.

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