Aortic valve repair is an acceptable therapeutic option for patients with aortic insufficiency. This functional classification allows a systematic approach to the repair of Al and can help to predict the surgical techniques required as well as the durability of repair. Restrictive cusp motion (type III), due to fibrosis or calcification, is an important predictor for recurrent Al following AV repair.
In bicuspid aortic valve repair, root replacement with the reimplantation technique stabilizes the ventriculoaortic junction, improves valve mobility (low gradient), and is associated with improved outcomes.
Background-Mitral valve (MV) repair is preferred over replacement in clinical guidelines and is an important determinant of the indication for surgery in degenerative mitral regurgitation (MR). Yet, the level of evidence supporting current recommendations is low, and recent data cast doubts on its validity in the current era. Accordingly, the aim of the present study was to analyze very long-term outcome after MV repair and replacement for degenerative MR with a flail leaflet. Methods-MIDA is a multicenter registry enrolling patients with degenerative MR with a flail leaflet in 6 tertiary European and US centers. We analyzed the outcome after MV repair (n=1,709) and replacement (n= 213), overall, by propensity score matching and by inverse probability-of-treatment weighting. Results-At baseline, patients undergoing MV repair were younger, had more comorbidities and were more likely to present with a posterior leaflet prolapse than those undergoing MV replacement. After propensity score matching as well as after inverse probability-of-treatment weighting, the 2 treatments groups were balanced and absolute standardized differences were usually below 10%, indicating adequate match. Operative mortality (defined as a death occurring within 30 days from surgery or during the same hospitalization) was lower after MV repair than after replacement, both in the entire (1.3 vs 4.7%; p<0.001) and in propensity-matched population (0.2% vs 4.4%; p<0.001). During a mean follow-up of 9.2 years, 552 deaths were observed, of which 207 were of cardiovascular origin. Twenty-year survival was better after MV repair than after MV replacement, both in the entire (46% vs 23%, p<0.001) and in matched population (41% vs 24%, p<0.001). Similar superiority of MV repair were obtained in patients' subsets based on age, sex or any stratification criteria (all p<0.001). MV repair was also associated with reduced incidence of reoperations and valve-related complications.Conclusions-Among patients with degenerative MR with a flail leaflet, referred to mitral surgery, MV repair was associated with lower operative mortality, better long-term survival and fewer valve-related complications compared to MV replacement.
OBJECTIVES
The bicuspid aortic valve (BAV) exists in a wide variety of valve phenotypes. The aim of this study was to assess the anatomical characteristics of the different phenotypes and develop a classification system to aid surgical repair.
METHODS
In 178 consecutive patients operated on for aortic insufficiency or aortic dilatation in 2 centres, 11 anatomical parameters of BAV were measured by echocardiography and intraoperatively. All BAV judged potentially repairable were included in the study.
RESULTS
Commissural orientation correlated positively with fusion length (R2 = 0.6, P < 0.001) and negatively with non-functional commissure height (R2 = 0.45, P < 0.001). The cohort was divided into 3 groups according to their commissural orientation (type A: symmetrical, 160–180°, n = 73; type B: asymmetrical, 140–159°, n = 74; and type C: very asymmetrical, 120–139°, n = 31). The patterns of cusp fusion, annulus and aortic size were similar among the groups. Fusion length and the geometric height of the cusps decreased from type A to C; non-functional commissure height increased from type A to C (P < 0.05). Patient age increased from type A to type C. Isolated aortic dilatation was more frequent in type A, and severe aortic insufficiency was more frequent in types B and C (P < 0.05). Valve repair techniques and management of commissural orientation varied among the 3 groups (P < 0.05). Aortic valve replacement and residual aortic insufficiency after repair were more frequent in type C (P < 0.05).
CONCLUSIONS
The BAV phenotypes follow a continuous spectrum that extends from symmetrical to very asymmetrical BAV. We describe the main anatomical parameters (including commissure orientation, length of fusion and non-functional commissure height) and their variation across this spectrum. We propose a new repair-oriented classification system based on those parameters that can be used to predict valve repair techniques. This classification needs further validation with regards to surgical techniques and long-term outcomes.
A systematic approach to bicuspid aortic valve repair yields good early and midterm results. Repair of bicuspid valves for aortic insufficiency is a feasible and attractive alternative to mechanical valve replacement in young patients.
Application of a simple functional classification for aortic root pathology and aortic valve disease allows the logical application of 'valve-conserving' surgical procedures with excellent early and medium-term results.
Sequential ITA grafting optimizes arterial revascularization. The long-term patency is excellent, is identical to that of single ITA grafting, and appears not much different from postoperative patency. The need for repeat surgical and interventional revascularization has been extremely low: 3.1% over the whole follow-up.
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