Bioprosthetic surgical valves are increasingly implanted during cardiac surgery, instead of mechanical valves. These tissue valves are associated with limited durability and as a result transcatheter valve-in-valve procedures are performed to treat failed bioprostheses. A relatively common adverse event of aortic valve-in-valve procedures is residual stenosis. Larger surgical valve size, supra-annular transcatheter heart valve type, as well as higher transcatheter heart valve implantation depth, have all been shown to reduce the incidence of elevated post-procedural gradients. With greater understanding of technical considerations and surgical planning, valve-invalve procedures could be more effective and eventually may become the standard of care for our increasingly ageing and comorbid population with failed surgical bioprostheses.
CITATION STYLE
Yao, R. J., Simonato, M., & Dvir, D. (2017). Optimising the haemodynamics of aortic valve-in-valve procedures. Interventional Cardiology: Reviews, Research, Resources, 12(1), 40–43. https://doi.org/10.15420/icr.2016:25:2
Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.