Primary Aortic Valve Replacement With Cryopreserved Aortic Allograft

Valve Replacement Forums

Help Support Valve Replacement Forums:

This site may earn a commission from merchant affiliate links, including eBay, Amazon, and others.

ken

Well-known member
Joined
Jun 12, 2001
Messages
71
Location
Los Angeles
http://circ.ahajournals.org/cgi/content/abstract/105/1/61

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
(Circulation. 2002;105:61.)
© 2002 American Heart Association, Inc.

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Clinical Investigation and Reports

Primary Aortic Valve Replacement With Cryopreserved Aortic Allograft
An Echocardiographic Follow-Up Study of 570 Patients
Przemysaw Palka, MD; Susan Harrocks, BN; Aleksandra Lange, MD; Darryl J. Burstow, MBBS, FRACP; Mark F. O?Brien, FRACS

From the Departments of Echocardiography (P.P., A.L., D.J.B.) and Cardiac Surgery (S.H., M.F.O.), the Prince Charles Hospital, Brisbane, Australia.


Correspondence to Dr P. Palka, Department of Echocardiography, The Prince Charles Hospital, Rode Road, Brisbane Qld-4032, Australia. E-mail [email protected]

Background? Despite the many advantages of an aortic allograft valve (AAV) over a prosthetic aortic valve, its durability is suboptimal. The aims of the present study were to document characteristic features of AAV dysfunction and to investigate factors influencing the development of such dysfunction.

Methods and Results? A group of 570 patients (mean age, 48±16 years) with a cryopreserved AAV underwent a follow-up echocardiographic study (mean time after surgery, 6.8 years; range, 1.0 to 22.9 years). Significant AAV regurgitation was present in 14.7% of patients, and AAV stenosis was present in 3.2%. The root replacement subgroup had the smallest number of patients with significant AAV regurgitation (5.0%) compared with the subcoronary (23.0%) or the inclusion cylinder technique subgroup (14.7%). After 10 to 15 years after AAV replacement, grade 2 AAV dysfunction was present in 40% of patients in the subcoronary subgroup, but no significant dysfunction was observed in patients in the root replacement subgroup (P<0.001). Smaller host aortic annulus size in both subcoronary (coefficient, -0.145; P=0.013) and root replacement subgroups (coefficient, -0.249; P=0.011) was associated with more frequent AAV dysfunction (grade 2). In addition, significant AAV dysfunction was more frequent when patients were younger (coefficient, -0.020; P=0.015) in the subcoronary subgroup and the donor was older (coefficient, 0.054; P=0.019) in the root replacement subgroup.

Conclusions? The present study indicates that the root replacement technique is associated with less frequent AAV degeneration. Our findings should help in establishing more strict selection criteria for surgical replacement procedure type and patient/donor factors for AAV replacement and, therefore, could lead to improve AAV longevity.
 
AAV

AAV

We are in a time when medical advances surpase all imagination in time and place. When advances like this comes along and may make a diference to someone one day. Thanks for sharing this information. Education is a good key to make sound decisions. Thanks and keep up the good work.

Caroline
09-13-01
Aortic valve replacement
St Jude's valve
 

Latest posts

Back
Top