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1.
Intermittent dysfunction of mechanical mitral valve prosthesis is an uncommon condition. It carries serious clinical implications if unrecognized. Here, we present a case of a 28‐year‐old female with a history of rheumatic multivalvular disease, for which she had undergone double valve replacement and tricuspid annuloplasty. Six months later, she presented with heart failure. Clinical examination revealed intermittent loss of closing clicks followed by a pansystolic murmur at the apex, suggestive of mitral prosthetic valve dysfunction. We highlight the echocardiographic findings of paroxysmal mitral valvular regurgitation secondary to prosthetic valve malfunction secondary to prosthetic valve thrombosis.  相似文献   

2.
In summary, this is a report on 5 various malfunctioning mechanical monocuspid mitral prostheses in which Doppler demonstrated intermittent restriction to the prosthetic disc opening, resulting in intermittent obstruction. In all 5 patients, it was mainly this abnormal Doppler signal that alerted us to the presence of prosthetic valve malfunction. In the 3 asymptomatic patients, the variable and intermittent increased delay in prosthetic valve opening was shown to be an early and sensitive echocardiographic sign of prosthesis malfunction in the absence of any significant increase in pressure gradients.  相似文献   

3.
BACKGROUND AND AIM OF THE STUDY: Early recognition of subclinical prosthetic valve malfunction may promote early treatment and avoidance of serious complications. Echocardiography cannot be applied on a daily basis; thus, a hand-held device (Thrombocheck) which is capable of detecting subtle changes in the acoustic sounds of prosthetic valve has been developed for the routine home monitoring of heart valve function. Herein is reported the authors' initial clinical experience with this device. METHODS: Seventy-one consecutive patients with one or more bileaflet prosthetic mechanical valves at any position were assessed both by transthoracic echocardiography (TTE) and by Thrombocheck. These patients attended the authors' clinic for either routine echocardiography (n = 62) or for the detection of prosthetic valve malfunction (n = 9). Cinefluoroscopy and transesophageal echocardiography were used selectively to confirm prosthetic valve malfunction. The Thrombocheck was held for 1 min in the subxiphoid position perpendicular to the patient, and indicated either normal function (OK), abnormal function (Warning) or 'no signal'. RESULTS: The study patients had in total 82 bileaflet valves (47 mitral, 31 aortic, four tricuspid). Eight patients (11.3%) had a 'no signal' indication. Of the remaining 63 patients, 10 (15.9%) had a 'warning' alarm (eight patients had current abnormal leaflet motion, one patient had a recent history of abnormal leaflet motion, and one had no evidence of prosthetic valve malfunction). The sensitivity and specificity for detecting abnormal prosthetic valve malfunction were 90% and 98%, respectively. CONCLUSION: The Thrombocheck had an excellent sensitivity and specificity for the detection of prosthetic valve malfunction in a cohort of patients with bileaflet mechanical prosthetic heart valves.  相似文献   

4.
Valvular heart disease is a global health problem. It is estimated that more than 280,000 prosthetic heart valves are implanted worldwide each year. As the world's population is aging, the incidence of prosthetic heart valve implantation and the prevalence of prosthetic heart valves continue to increase. Assessing heart valve prosthesis function remains challenging, as prosthesis malfunction is unpredictable but not uncommon.  相似文献   

5.
A case of aortic ball valve prosthesis malfunction is described in which the poppet became alternately stuck in the open and closed position. The patient experienced chest pain followed by pulmonary edema and cardiac arrest. Malfunction of prosthetic valve was diagnosed on echocardiogram and cardiopulmonary resuscitation was carried out until a Bjork-Shiley valve could be inserted in place of the faulty prosthesis. At the time of the operation, poppet migration had occurred and the poppet could not be found. Subsequent Bjork-Shiley aortic valve prosthesis dysfunction was suggested by variation in the intensity of the aortic opening sound and in the duration of the systolic ejection period. Fluoroscopy revealed the missing poppet in the left ventricle. Following surgical removal of the poppet, “normal” Bjork-Shiley valve function was restored.  相似文献   

6.
Summary An occluder which intermittently became stuck in the open position with concomitant aortic regurgitation was encountered in a patient subjected to an aortic valve replacement with a 23 Omniscience prosthetic valve. The patient was intermittently aware of the complete momentary disappearances of the valve sounds, the etiology of which could not be discerned. During fluoroscopic examination, the occluder became stuck for a few cardiac cycles in what appeared to be the fully open position before finally moving. Prosthetic valve malfunction was thus diagnosed.The emergency operation was successful. Operative findings revealed that a thin thrombus had developed in a curtain-like fashion on the left ventricular face of the prosthesis with mild tissue overgrowth along the perimeter of the valve. The Omniscience prosthesis was replaced with a 19-mm St. Jude Medical prosthesis, and the patient's post-operative course has been uneventful.  相似文献   

7.
We studied 13 porcine bioprostheses removed from patients with endocarditis at our institute during the last 4.5 years. All bioprostheses had been removed at reoperation and were analyzed using anatomical and histological techniques. Each bioprosthesis was found to have developed rather constant lesions which were not related to the type of bioprosthesis. The stage of infection was not related to the duration of implantation. The presence of perivalvular abscesses was an ominous finding, often being the seat of persistent endocarditis. Our good clinical results of reoperation lead us to suggest that this be performed early once valvular or prosthetic malfunction is detected. Bioprostheses are, in our experience, the best choice in the surgical treatment of prosthetic valve endocarditis.  相似文献   

8.
Obstruction to a prosthetic cardiac valve is a well-recognized complication of cardiac valve replacement. Malfunction of the mobile component of a prosthetic valve to open or close correctly may occur in consequence of intrinsic or extrinsic causes (thrombus, vegetation, entrapment of left ventricular myocardium, suture entanglement, and pannus formation) that may result prosthetic valve stenosis and/or insufficiency. In the case we report a 48-year-old female with valve dysfunction occurred early after surgery, as one valve leaflet was only able to partially open due to suture entrapment.  相似文献   

9.
We describe a patient who developed the unusual haemodynamic phenomenon of periodic intermittent electromechanical dissociation during regular sinus tachycardia about 20 hours after mitral valve replacement with a tilting disc mechanical prosthesis. Echo-cardiographic confirmation allowed prompt and life saving corrective surgery for a stuck prosthetic valve disc. © 1996 Wiley-Liss, Inc.  相似文献   

10.
Mechanical prosthetic valve thrombosis is a life-threatening complication necessitating immediate intervention. The presenting signs and symptoms of this illness are somewhat variable, but physical examination and transesophageal echocardiography enable rapid diagnosis. To avoid catastrophic complications, valve replacement or debridement, or thrombolysis in the correct setting, must be performed without delay. It is not entirely clear which therapy is superior. For any given patient, the risks of thrombolytic therapy, including bleeding, systemic embolism, and failure to restore valvular function, must be weighed against the risks of surgical intervention. Once the decision is made to operate, the choice of valve replacement versus debridement is one best made intraoperatively, upon visual inspection of the valve apparatus. Despite aggressive therapy, morbidity and mortality from prosthetic valve thrombosis and its treatment are not trivial. Fortunately, with current prosthetic devices and aggressive prophylactic anticoagulation, the incidence of prosthetic valve thrombosis remains low. Antiplatelet therapy may offer additional benefit to patients being prophylaxed with warfarin. This report details the case of a woman with aortic and mitral prosthetic valves who presented with heart failure and evidence of severe aortic prosthetic dysfunction after a period of suboptimal anticoagulation. She successfully underwent debridement of the mitral prosthesis and replacement of the aortic valve. The relevant literature is reviewed.  相似文献   

11.
Percutaneous implantation of valved stents is now routinely performed to treat pulmonary valve regurgitation and stenosis. In addition, there are isolated reports of implantation of valved stents in the tricuspid position to treat prosthetic tricuspid stenosis or regurgitation when a prosthetic valve ring exists. We present a case in which a patient with combined severe tricuspid valve and pulmonary valve disease was successfully treated with sequential implantation of percutaneous valved stents in a single procedure. The procedure was straightforward, of short duration, and dramatically improved the patient's functional status. © 2012 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.  相似文献   

12.
The catheterization parameters of 42 patients with surgically confirmed prosthetic valve malfunction were retrospectively analyzed in order to evaluate the role of hemodynamic and angiocardiographic examination in the diagnosis of prosthetic complications. The invasive investigation provided in all cases more precise informations regarding the type and grade of prosthetic malfunction as compared to noninvasive techniques. Transvalvular gradients could be quantified, the amount of regurgitation could be defined and associated lesions (paraprosthetic aneurysms, aortic root dissection, fistulas secondary to bacterial endocarditis) could be recognized. The surgical exploration confirmed prosthetic malfunction in all cases except two, with fibrous tissue ingrowth: at the moment this complication is not distinguishable from thrombosis and no specific diagnostic signs have been described either with invasive or noninvasive techniques. In our experience the patients who can benefit from hemodynamic examination are: patients with echocardiographic examination of poor technical quality, patients in whom noninvasive investigations can not completely explain the clinical status ("false negative" echocardiograms, multiple prosthetic valves), all cases in whom cardiac surgery requires a precisely detailed evaluation of the prosthetic malfunction. The opportunity or necessity to perform an invasive study in patients with clinically suspected or proven prosthetic malfunction should be discussed individually.  相似文献   

13.
A 52-year-old male with idiopathic hypereosinophilic syndrome (HES) was transferred to our institution following the development of acute respiratory failure and shock. He had previously undergone tricuspid valve replacement with bioprosthetic valves on two occasions: the initial surgery for severe native tricuspid valve stenosis and the redo surgery for severe prosthetic valve stenosis and regurgitation. Conventional imaging assessment using transoesophageal echocardiography was suboptimal and comprehensive assessment of prosthetic valve function was aided by the use of intracardiac echocardiography (ICE). ICE provided high quality 2D imaging of the prosthesis demonstrating thrombus-like material coating the inner surfaces of the prosthetic valve stents effectively forming a tunnel-like obstruction. Unusual hemodynamics secondary to severe tricuspid stenosis were demonstrated by CW Doppler with intermittent "signal fusion" resulting from blunted respiratory variation in the markedly elevated right atrial pressure relative to right ventricular pressure. Successful balloon valvuloplasty was performed with ICE proving highly valuable in guiding balloon position as well as monitoring the efficacy of the subsequent inflations.  相似文献   

14.
This report presents an echocardiographic study of four cases of malfunction of the Bjork-Shiley prosthetic heart valve in the mitral position. The malfunction was proved in all patients by cardiac catheterization, observation at cardiac surgery or findings at postmortem examination. Two distinctive motion patterns of the malfunctioning valves were detected in the echocardiogram. One was a rounded and slowed pattern of opening and closure that correlated with the presence of abnormal clotting on the prosthesis (two patients). The other was an unusual “hump” during the opening phase that correlated with significant perivalve leak (two patients). These patterns along with other observations appear to be valuable in recognizing mitral valve Bjork-Shiley prosthetic malfunction with echocardiography.  相似文献   

15.
Prosthetic valve infective endocarditis (IE) is one of the most serious postimplantation complications. Prosthetic aortic valve IE constitutes 1%–6% of all prosthetic valve IE cases. We present a dramatic echocardiographic case of prosthetic aortic valve IE leading to near‐complete valve dehiscence. Echocardiographic evidence of prosthetic aortic valve rocking motion is indicative of significant dehiscence. Aside from IE, other causes and risk factors for prosthetic aortic valve dehiscence include inflammatory and autoimmune vasculitides, concomitant ascending aorta aneurysm, and aortic root calcification.  相似文献   

16.
Patients with mitral valve disease and extreme enlargement of the left atrium usually exhibit significant decrease in chamber size following corrective mitral valve surgery. We describe a patient in whom extreme right and left atrial enlargement developed, and progressed following mitral valve replacement, with no evidence of prosthetic valve malfunction or tricuspid valve disease.  相似文献   

17.
Mechanical malfunction and thrombosis of prosthetic heart valves   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
The incidence of acute valvular malfunction of prosthetic heart valves has been increasing. Mechanical failure is usually due to changes of the poppets or thrombosis of the valve. Thrombosis of the valve limits the poppet movement, thus causing dysfunction. Thrombosis has been noted in essentially all types of prosthetic valves. Changes in the poppet include ball variance, disc variance and wearing of the poppet. Abnormalities of the poppet have been detected in the Starr-Edwards, SCDK-Cutter, Smeloff-Cutter, Magovern-Cromie, Hufnagel, and Wada-Cutter aortic and mitral valves, as well as the Cross-Jones, Kay-Shiley, Kay-Suzuki, Beall-Surgitool, Hammersmith and Cape Town mitral valves. The present report reviews the clinical and diagnostic problems of mechanical malfunction of prosthetic valves.  相似文献   

18.
After mitral valve replacement with a prosthetic valve, the valve should be competent and there should not be any residual prosthetic valve regurgitation. Transvalvular residual prosthetic valve regurgitation are difficult to diagnose and quantify. we are reporting interesting TEE images as a diagnostic dilemma in a case of transvalvular mitral regurgitation following mitral valve replacement secondary to entrapment of sub-valvular apparatus in a Chitra mechanical heart valve.  相似文献   

19.
The incidence of mitral prosthetic valve thrombosis is low and generally dependent on low levels of anticoagulation. The clinical presentation is highly variable and ranges from asymptomatic patient though to arterial embolism or hemodynamic symptoms of valve obstruction. We report a case of a patient with presyncope and prosthetic mitral valve dysfunction with intermittent flow obstruction.  相似文献   

20.
Following the increasing number of patients with heart valve replacement and an extended indication (older age groups, acute infective endocarditis, multivalvular procedures) the indicence of malfunction of valve prostheses is continuously growing. The prognosis of patients with a malfunctioning prosthesis mainly depends on early diagnosis and adequate therapy. In a retrospective study (1970 to 1984) 3,533 implanted heart valve prostheses were followed up and the cases with malfunction (n = 150; 4.2%) were analyzed. During the follow-up period after 1963 mitral valve replacements (MVR) there were 78 cases of malfunction (4.6%), after 1806 aortic valve replacements (AVR) 73 (4.1%), and after 34 tricuspid valve replacements (TVR) 4 malfunctions (11.8%). These malfunctions concerned periprosthetic leakages (n = 65), prosthetic endocarditis (n = 42), prosthetic valve thrombosis (n = 13), mechanical dysfunction including bioprosthetic degeneration (n = 17), valve related hemolysis (n = 3), and unsatisfactory hemodynamics (n = 10). Special attention was turned to the problem of prosthetic endocarditis (1963-1984) found in a total of 71 patients following 3,878 prosthetic valve replacements (1.9%). In 42 reoperated cases (1970-1984) the causing microorganisms were analyzed, demonstrating staphylococci in a leading position. Secondary complications and additional risk factors are discussed. There has been no change concerning the basis and the strategy of management for prosthetic endocarditis for many years: After a short time of conservative management with tested antibiotics, early reoperation and exchange of the prosthesis seems to be the optimal therapy, despite a distinctly high postoperative mortality (17%).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

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