Most people with mitral valve prolapse, particularly people without symptoms, don't require treatment.
If you have mitral valve regurgitation but don't have symptoms, your health care provider may recommend regular checkups to monitor your condition.
If you have severe mitral valve regurgitation, medications or surgery may be needed even if you don't have symptoms.
Medications
Medications may be needed to treat irregular heartbeats or other complications of mitral valve prolapse. Medications include:
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Beta blockers. These drugs relax blood vessels and slow the heartbeat, which reduces blood pressure.
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Water pills (diuretics). These medicines help remove salt (sodium) and water through your urine, reducing blood pressure.
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Heart rhythm drugs (antiarrhythmics). Medications may be used to help control irregular heart rhythms.
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Blood thinners (anticoagulants). If mitral valve disease is causing an irregular heartbeat called atrial fibrillation, your health care provider may recommend blood-thinning drugs to prevent blood clots. Atrial fibrillation increases the risk of blood clots and strokes. If you had mitral valve replacement with a mechanical valve, blood thinners are needed for life.
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Antibiotics. The American Heart Association says antibiotics aren't usually necessary for someone with mitral valve prolapse. But if you've had mitral valve replacement, your care provider may recommend taking antibiotics before dental procedures to prevent a heart infection called infective endocarditis.
Surgery and other procedures
Most people with mitral valve prolapse don't need surgery. But surgery may be recommended if mitral prolapse causes severe mitral valve regurgitation, whether or not you have symptoms.
Surgery for a diseased or damaged mitral valve includes mitral valve repair or mitral valve replacement. Mitral valve repair is preferred because it saves the existing valve.
Valve repair and replacement may be done using open-heart surgery or minimally invasive surgery. Minimally invasive surgery involves smaller incisions and may have less blood loss and a quicker recovery time.
During mitral valve repair surgery, the surgeon might remove excess tissue from the prolapsed valve so the flaps can close tightly. The surgeon may also replace the cords that support the valve. Other repairs may also be done.
If mitral valve repair isn't possible, the valve may be replaced. During mitral valve replacement surgery, a surgeon removes the mitral valve and replaces it with a mechanical valve or a valve made from cow, pig or human heart tissue (biological tissue valve).
Sometimes, a heart catheter procedure is done to place a replacement valve into a biological tissue valve that no longer works well. This is called a valve-in-valve procedure.