Following MV reconstruction performed with surgeon’s preferred technique and annuloplasty ring placement, valve competency is statically tested by injecting saline into the ventricle; if no residual regurgitation nor scallop prolapse or billowing is elucidated in association with a sufficient and harmonic length of coaptation throughout a whole symmetric coaptation line, the result is optimal and the atriotomy is closed. Nevertheless, one of these situations may exist, thus leading the surgeon to perform additional procedures in order to obtain a perfect continent valve.
The same scenario may occur after intra-operative transaesophageal echocardiographic control detecting an unsatisfying mitral repair requiring re-clamping and valve re-examination.
After detailed MV inspection, the prolapsing or poor coapting leaflets segments are easily identified. As a first step of the operative technique, one or more 4–0 Gore-Tex sutures (W.L. Gore & Associates, Flagstaff, AZ) are placed with a double passage in the appropriate papillary muscle head, oriented longitudinally and including the fibrous tip of the muscle (Fig. 1a). Papillary muscle exposure may be difficult in this phase due to the presence of the ring and of valvular repairing sutures: an unconnected aspirating cannula or a cylindrical mechanical prosthesis tester are helpful in reclining the anterior leaflet and facilitating the access to the subvalvular apparatus.
A 2/0 Ethibond Excel (Ethicon, Somerville, NJ) suture is passed in the posterior portion of the annuloplasty ring facing (in case of residual anterior leaflet prolapse) or at the basis (for the posterior one) of the guilty scallop and tied leaning on a surgical hook in order to form a loop representing the reference element for neochord length assessment (Fig. 1a, b). As the posterior ring is chosen as the seat of the guiding stitch, the technique is applicable in case of uncomplete annuloplasty too.
Now, both arms of the previously placed Gore-Tex suture are first passed through the margin of the prolapsing leaflet segment from the ventricular side to the atrial one, then through the reference-loop from the atrium to the ventricle and finally again into the edge of the prolapsing scallop from the ventricle to the atrium (Fig. 1c). Afterwards, knots are tied at the annular level (Fig. 1d) and the annular reference-loop is cut (Fig. 1e) to release the prolapsing leaflet.
Figure 1a–e describes the case of an anterior residual prolapse but the same procedure is equally applicable to a posterior one.
Such technique of artificial chordae height measurement can similarly be employed as the first approach for MV myxomatous disease repair by placing the loop stitch in the native annulus if the surgeon’s preference is to perform annuloplasty at the end of leaflet reconstruction or, on the contrary, in the prosthethic ring if the repairing sequence is neochordae positioning in the papillary muscle—annuloplasty—chords anchorage to the leaflet.