The aim of this retrospective study was to evaluate the time-related regression of left ventricular hypertrophy after stentless vs. stented aortic valve replacement. From January 1992 to December 2002, 145 patients had a Toronto stentless porcine valve and 106 had a stented Carpentier-Edwards aortic valve replacement. Over a 10-year follow-up, survival was superior in the Toronto group vs. the Carpentier-Edwards group (84% vs. 74% at 4 years; 78% vs. 68% at 6 years; p < 0.001). A significant and constant reduction of peak and mean transvalvular gradients after valve replacement resulted in substantial regression of left ventricular mass index in both groups, which did not reach statistical significance. However, this phenomenon stopped at 3 years, and left ventricular mass index increased slowly after 5 years. Stentless and stented bioprostheses both showed good early and late clinical and hemodynamic outcomes, with the advantage of better midterm survival for stentless xenografts.
Endoscopic vein harvesting (EVH) is becoming common for the patients undergoing coronary artery bypass grafting. Using carbon dioxide insufflations during the vein harvest can produce rare but catastrophic CO(2) embolism. We report a case of massive right atrial CO(2) embolism due to femoral vein injury which occurred during the performance of a routine EVH procedure.
Giant coronary artery fistula is rare. We describe the diagnostic work-up and surgical management of a 55-year-old woman who presented with congestive heart failure caused by a giant coronary artery fistula from the left circumflex artery to the coronary sinus.
Papillary Fibroelastomas are rare, primary cardiac tumors. They are typically diagnosed as an incidental finding but can also present as thrombo-embolic events. We present the case of 78-years-old man who presented to emergency room with a cerebrovascular event (CVE). Transesophageal echocardiography (TEE) revealed e presence of a mass on the aortic valve. Intra-operatively, two masses where found: one was highly mobile attached to left ventricular (LV) side of the left coronary cusp, another small size mass attached to the non-coronary cusp, and there was suspicion of a mass attached to the mitral valve. The two masses were surgically excised using a right mini-thoracotomy, and histopathological examination confirmed the diagnosis."
A retrospective assessment of clinical and echocardiographic variables was performed in 145 patients who received a Toronto SPV aortic valve replacement. The majority (90%) of these elderly patients (mean age, 75.5 +/- 7.4 years) were preoperatively in New York Heart Association class III-IV. Operative mortality was 4.8%. Follow-up was complete up to 10 years and revealed few valve-related complications: thromboembolism (7), bleeding (4), and prosthesis dysfunction necessitating reoperation (3). Late mortality was cardiac-related in 11.7% and noncardiac-related in 17.2%. Actuarial survival was 83% at 5 years and 63% at 8 years. Echocardiography showed low transvalvular gradients (peak, 17.5 +/- 7.5 mm Hg; mean, 9.2 +/- 4.2 mm Hg) resulting in a significant reduction in left ventricular mass index during the first 3 years. Independent of the transprosthetic gradient, left ventricular mass index tended to increase again beyond the 5th year, which correlated positively with the presence of arterial hypertension in this older population. The Toronto SPV bioprosthesis offers an aortic valve substitute with excellent long-term hemodynamics, resulting in significant early left ventricular mass regression. Considering the limitations of this selected elderly population, the clinical outcome and survival up to 10 years are encouraging, with few observed valve-related events.
Although porcine mitral bioprostheses provide predictably good long-term outcomes, unexpected leaflet tears leading to abrupt haemodynamic changes may occur. We report on a patient who presented with acute dyspnea due to cuspal tear of a porcine bioprosthetic mitral valve causing severe mitral regurgitation, her condition was subsequently complicated by systemic infection, probably pneumonia, and was successfully managed with urgent redo-mitral valve replacement.
Although porcine mitral bioprostheses provide predictably good long-term outcomes, unexpected leaflet tears leading to abrupt haemodynamic changes may occur. Here, we report on a patient who was presented with acute dyspnea due to a cuspal tear of a porcine bioprosthetic mitral valve causing severe mitral regurgitation. Her condition was subsequently complicated by a systemic infection, probably pneumonia, and was successfully managed with an urgent redo-mitral valve replacement.
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