The higher thrombogenicity of the St. Jude Medical valve in the tricuspid position altered our choice of valve substitutes from the St. Jude Medical valve to a bioprosthesis which is lack of need for anticoagulant therapy except for juvenile patients who are able to maintain potent anticoagulant therapy.
Between 1984, and 1992, we observed 8 patients with an obstructed St. Jude Medical (SJM) valve. Of these, 1 had an obstructed SJM valve in the aortic position, 3 in the mitral position, and 4 in the tricuspid position. Diagnosis of obstruction of the SJM valve was made by cineradiography combined with echocardiography in all 8 patients. Restriction or absence of movement of the leaflet of the SJM valve was observed by cineradiography in all of the 8 patients. Normal range of leaflet mobility of the SJM valve was measured by conventional cineradiography in 70 patients with a normal SJM valve, and the results were compared with the leaflet mobility obtained from the 8 patients with an obstructed SJM valve. In this study, leaflet function in the obstructed SJM valve was strikingly abnormal, with both opening and closing angles, and leaflet motion clearly outside the normal range. Of the 8 patients, 4 underwent urgent prosthetic valve replacements after cineradiography and echocardiography were carried out. Thrombolysis using urokinase was performed in 4 patients, and this treatment was successful in 1 patient. Efficacy of thrombolytic therapy was evaluated by repeat cineradiography. Three of the 4 patients who received thrombolysis showed no significant improvement of leaflet mobility after at least 72 hours of thrombolytic therapy, and finally required surgical correction for the obstructed SJM valve. We believe that cineradiography combined with echocardiography is the optimal method for the diagnosis of obstruction of the SJM valve, and to follow the effect of thrombolytic therapy on prosthetic valve function.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
Twenty patients underwent nonsurgical and/or surgical treatment for obstruction of mechanical prosthetic valves. The obstructed prosthetic valve was in the aortic position in 11 patients, in the mitral position in 5, and in the tricuspid position in 4. Twelve patients had a bileaflet valve (3 aortic, 5 mitral, 4 tricuspid), and 8 had a tilting disk valve (all aortic). The diagnosis of prosthetic valve obstruction was made by cineradiography and echocardiography. Thrombolytic therapy was instituted in a series of our 10 most recent patients (11 cases), except for one patient with acute renal failure, regardless of the position of the obstructed prosthetic valve. Successful thrombolysis was achieved in 6 cases (54.5%). Six patients required surgical treatment subsequent to either failed or incomplete thrombolysis, and one patient died of congestive heart failure 1 month after surgery. Nonfatal neurologic events occurred in 2 cases (18.2%). A total of 16 patients underwent surgical treatment. Two (12.6%) of the 16 patients died of causes unrelated to the operative procedures before discharge from the hospital. These results suggest that thrombolytic therapy appears to be an attractive nonsurgical alternative for valve thrombosis when the patient's clinical condition is not critical, and thus surgical treatment should only be performed in an emergency on seriously ill patients.
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