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Stent valve implantation in conventional redo aortic valve surgery to prevent patient-prosthesis mismatch.

Authors :
Ferrari E
Franciosi G
Clivio S
Faletra F
Moccetti M
Moccetti T
Pedrazzini G
Demertzis S
Source :
Interactive cardiovascular and thoracic surgery [Interact Cardiovasc Thorac Surg] 2017 Mar 01; Vol. 24 (3), pp. 319-323.
Publication Year :
2017

Abstract

Objectives: The goal was to show the technical details, feasibility and clinical results of balloon-expandable stent valve implantation in the aortic position during conventional redo open-heart surgery in selected obese patients with a small aortic prosthesis and severe patient-prosthesis mismatch.<br />Methods: Two symptomatic overweight patients (body mass index of 31 and 38), each with a small aortic prosthesis (a 4-year-old, 21-mm Hancock II biological valve and a 29-year-old, 23-mm Duromedic mechanical valve), increased transvalvular gradients (59/31 and 74/44 mmHg) and a reduced indexed effective orifice area (0.50 and 0.43 cm 2 /m 2 ) underwent implantation of two 26-mm balloon-expandable Sapien 3 valves during standard on-pump redo valve surgery.<br />Results: Using full re-sternotomy, cardiopulmonary bypass and cardioplegic arrest, the two balloon-expandable stent valves were implanted under direct view using a standard aortotomy, after prosthesis removal and without annulus enlargement. Aortic cross-clamp times were 162 and 126 min; cardiopulmonary bypass times were 178 and 180 min; total surgical times were 360 and 318 min. At discharge, echocardiograms showed transvalvular peak and mean gradients of 13/9 and 23/13 mmHg and indexed effective orifice areas of 0.64 and 1.08 cm 2 /m 2 . The 3-month echocardiographic follow-up showed transvalvular peak and mean gradients of 18/9 and 19/11 mmHg and indexed effective orifice areas of 0.78 cm 2 /m 2 and 0.84 cm 2 /m 2 , with improved symptoms (New York Heart Association class 1).<br />Conclusions: Implantation of a balloon-expandable stent valve during redo aortic valve surgery is feasible in selected cases and prevents patient-prosthesis mismatch in obese patients without need for aortic annulus enlargement. Moreover, in the case of stent valve degeneration, this approach permits additional valve-in-valve procedures with large stent valves and prevents re-redo surgery.<br /> (© The Author 2016. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the European Association for Cardio-Thoracic Surgery. All rights reserved.)

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1569-9285
Volume :
24
Issue :
3
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Interactive cardiovascular and thoracic surgery
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
28040758
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1093/icvts/ivw397