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Cardiovascular
Mayo Clinic Radio: Structural heart disease / hip arthroscopy / avoiding infection during manicures and pedicures
Structural heart disease is a problem with the tissues or valves of the heart. The valves in your heart control the flow of blood from one part of the heart to another. The mitral valve is located between the two chambers on the left side of the heart — the left atrium and left ventricle. There are several abnormalities that can affect the mitral valve. Two common forms of mitral valve disease are mitral valve regurgitation and mitral valve stenosis. In mitral valve regurgitation, the valve leaks. In mitral valve stenosis, the valve is too narrow and restricts the blood flow. Treatment for mitral valve disease can range from monitoring and making healthy lifestyle changes to surgical procedures to repair or replace the mitral valve.
On the next Mayo Clinic Radio program, Dr. Peter Pollak, director of Structural Heart Disease at Mayo Clinic's Florida campus, will discuss mitral valve disease and another structural heart disease problem, patent foramen ovale — a hole in the heart that didn't close the way it should after birth. Also on the program, Dr. Bruce Levy, a Mayo Clinic orthopedic surgeon, will explain the minimally invasive hip arthroscopy procedure. And Dr. Rachel Miest, a Mayo Clinic dermatologist, will offer tips to keep you safe from infection during manicures and pedicures.
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Mayo Clinic Radio produces a weekly one-hour radio program highlighting health and medical information from Mayo Clinic.