Carpentier’s functional classification of mitral regurgitation (MR)

Carpentier’s functional classification of mitral regurgitation (MR)

Carpentier’s functional classification of mitral regurgitation (MR), which is based on the mechanism of leaflet motion/dysfunction rather than etiology.

Here’s the breakdown:


Carpentier’s Classification of MR (by leaflet dysfunction mechanism)

  1. Type I – Normal leaflet motion
    • Mechanism: Annular dilatation or leaflet perforation
    • Leaflet motion: Normal
    • Examples:
      • Annular dilatation in dilated cardiomyopathy
      • Endocarditis (leaflet perforation)

  1. Type II – Excessive leaflet motion (prolapse/flail)
    • Mechanism: Chordal rupture or elongation → leaflet(s) prolapse into left atrium
    • Leaflet motion: Increased
    • Examples:
      • Mitral valve prolapse
      • Flail leaflet due to chordae rupture

  1. Type III – Restricted leaflet motion
    • Subdivided into:
      • Type IIIa – Restriction in systole & diastole
        • Mechanism: Leaflet thickening, fibrosis, calcification
        • Example: Rheumatic heart disease
      • Type IIIb – Restriction in systole only
        • Mechanism: Tethering of leaflets due to LV remodeling
        • Example: Ischemic/dilated cardiomyopathy

TypeLeaflet MotionMechanismTypical Cause
INormalAnnular dilatation or perforationDCM, endocarditis
IIExcessive (prolapse)Chordal elongation/ruptureMVP, flail leaflet
IIIaRestricted (systole & diastole)Leaflet thickening/calcificationRheumatic disease
IIIbRestricted (systole only)Papillary muscle tetheringIschemic/functional MR

Q1. Carpentier’s classification of MR is based on:
A. Mechanism of leaflet motion
B. Etiology of mitral valve disease
C. Severity of regurgitation
D. Left atrial size
Carpentier’s system classifies MR by leaflet motion, not etiology or severity.

Q2. Type I MR is characterized by:
A. Leaflet prolapse
B. Normal leaflet motion with annular dilatation or perforation
C. Restriction in systole and diastole
D. Restriction in systole only
Type I: normal leaflet motion, MR due to annular dilatation or perforation.

Q3. Which condition commonly produces Type II MR?
A. Dilated cardiomyopathy
B. Rheumatic heart disease
C. Mitral valve prolapse or chordal rupture
D. Ischemic heart disease
Type II MR results from excessive leaflet motion, as in MVP or flail due to chordal rupture.

Q4. Restriction of leaflets in both systole and diastole is seen in:
A. Type I MR
B. Type II MR
C. Type IIIb MR
D. Type IIIa MR
Type IIIa MR (rheumatic) causes restricted motion throughout the cardiac cycle.

Q5. Ischemic MR due to LV remodeling is classified as:
A. Type IIIb MR
B. Type II MR
C. Type I MR
D. Type IIIa MR
Ischemic/functional MR = Type IIIb (restricted in systole only due to tethering).

Q6. Which of the following best describes Type II MR?
A. Normal leaflet motion
B. Excessive leaflet motion (prolapse/flail)
C. Restriction in both phases
D. Restriction in systole only
Type II is excessive leaflet motion due to chordal rupture or elongation.

Q7. Rheumatic mitral regurgitation is typically:
A. Type I
B. Type II
C. Type IIIa
D. Type IIIb
Rheumatic disease causes leaflet thickening/restriction in systole and diastole → Type IIIa.

Q8. Functional MR due to dilated cardiomyopathy is most often:
A. Type I
B. Type II
C. Type IIIa
D. Type IIIb
Functional MR due to LV dilatation/tethering = Type IIIb.

Q9. Which of the following is an example of Type I MR?
A. Annular dilatation with normal leaflet motion
B. Mitral valve prolapse
C. Chordal rupture with flail leaflet
D. Rheumatic leaflet restriction
Annular dilatation without leaflet pathology = Type I.

Q10. Flail leaflet is classified as:
A. Type I
B. Type II
C. Type IIIa
D. Type IIIb
Flail leaflet = excessive motion → Type II MR.

Q11. In Type IIIb MR, leaflet restriction occurs in:
A. Diastole only
B. Both systole & diastole
C. Systole only
D. Never
Type IIIb = systolic restriction due to tethering.

Q12. Leaflet perforation in infective endocarditis produces:
A. Type II MR
B. Type IIIa MR
C. Type IIIb MR
D. Type I MR
Perforation with normal motion = Type I.

Q13. In MR classification, “normal leaflet motion” belongs to:
A. Type I
B. Type II
C. Type IIIa
D. Type IIIb
Type I = normal motion (annular dilatation, perforation).

Q14. Excessive leaflet motion best defines:
A. Type I
B. Type II
C. Type IIIa
D. Type IIIb
Type II MR is due to prolapse/flail from chordal pathology.

Q15. Chronic ischemic MR is usually:
A. Type I
B. Type II
C. Type IIIb
D. Type IIIa
Ischemic MR with tethering is Type IIIb.

Q16. Which is NOT a cause of Type II MR?
A. Mitral valve prolapse
B. Flail leaflet
C. Chordal elongation
D. Annular dilatation
Annular dilatation → Type I, not Type II.

Q17. Leaflet tethering after MI is:
A. Type IIIb MR
B. Type II MR
C. Type IIIa MR
D. Type I MR
MI with LV remodeling → Type IIIb MR.

Q18. Which type of MR shows leaflet restriction in both systole and diastole?
A. Type I
B. Type IIIa
C. Type IIIb
D. Type II
Type IIIa is restrictive in both phases (rheumatic).

Q19. Which type of MR is associated with chordal rupture?
A. Type I
B. Type IIIa
C. Type II
D. Type IIIb
Chordal rupture → flail → excessive motion → Type II.

Q20. Carpentier’s classification helps primarily in:
A. Grading MR severity
B. Differentiating acute vs chronic MR
C. Identifying etiology of MR
D. Guiding surgical repair strategy
The classification is used by surgeons to plan valve repair techniques.

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