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1.
Seven patients underwent postoperative right heart catheterization following implantation of the St. Jude Medical prosthetic valve in the tricuspid position. Six patients were in atrial fibrillation at catheterization, and 1 was in normal sinus rhythm. At postoperative catheterization, the mean right atrial pressure ranged between 4 and 16 mm Hg (mean, 9.7 mm Hg); right ventricular systolic pressure was normal in 1 patient, mildly elevated (less than 50 mm Hg) in 4 patients, and moderately elevated (65 and 70 mm Hg) in 2. The cardiac output ranged between 3.0 and 7.0 L/min (mean, 4.2 L/min). There was no end-diastolic gradient across the St. Jude Medical prosthesis in 6 patients. The other patient had a gradient of 2 mm Hg across the valve when cardiac output was 7.0 L/min. On fluoroscopy, both discs demonstrated full excursion in all patients.These data demonstrate that a normally functioning St. Jude Medical valve in the tricuspid position does not create obstruction to forward flow, and they support use of this prosthesis in patients with tricuspid valve disease.  相似文献   

2.
A 47-year-old patient had undergone the mitral valve replacement using a SAM disk prosthesis in 1977. 15 years and 10 months after the first operation, she successfully underwent emergency replacement with a St. Jude Medical valve prosthesis because of detachment of the disk of the SAM prosthesis and now she is doing well.  相似文献   

3.
Pressure gradients and left ventricular function were assessed by Doppler echocardiography in 50 patients with Bj?rk-Shiley mitral valve and 50 patients with St. Jude Medical valve prosthesis. There was correlation between pressure gradient and valve size, and between effective valve orifice area and valve size for St. Jude Medical valve. These correlations were not found in Bj?rk-Shiley valve. Clinical improvement and cardiac function were quite satisfactory in 20 patients with Bj?rk-Shiley valve and in 32 patients with St. Jude Medical valve whose pressure gradients were less than 10 mmHg. Twenty eight of 50 patients with Bj?rk-Shiley valve and 42 of 50 patients with St. Jude Medical valve showed good response to the exercise test. Eight patients underwent reoperation because of unacceptably high gradient caused by thrombus and pannus formation. The patients who show high pressure gradient across the valve prosthesis should be followed up cautiously.  相似文献   

4.
Since 1979, 50 children, 4 months to 15 years of age, have successfully undergone cardiac valve replacement with the St. Jude Medical prosthesis (St. Jude Medical, Inc., St. Paul, Minn.). There were 24 boys and 26 girls. The valve replaced was mitral in 28 children, aortic in 15, mitral and aortic in 1, and mitral and tricuspid in 1. A left-sided tricuspid valve was replaced in 3 children. Anticoagulant therapy was maintained in all children; 40 children were treated with warfarin, whereas 10 children who underwent aortic or mitral valve replacement were on a regimen of aspirin combined with dipyridamole. The follow-up period, comprising 224 patient-years, ranged from 1 to 10 years. There were four valve-related complications: one from thromboembolism, two from valve thrombosis, and the other one from prosthetic valve endocarditis. Actuarial rate free from all valve-related complications at 10 years was 84.7%. There were four late deaths: one from valve thrombosis and the others from non-valve-related complications. Actuarial survival rate at 10 years was 90.8%. All surviving children are in functional class I, and no child so far has needed replacement of a prosthesis because of somatic growth. These results indicate that the St. Jude Medical prosthesis is a cardiac valve substitute of choice for valve replacement in children.  相似文献   

5.
Nine patients with intractable hemolysis caused by perivalvular leakage following mitral valve replacement with a St. Jude Medical prosthesis are presented. All patients had dark-colored hemoglobinuria, which appeared from 1 day to 44 days after the operation, with moderate or severe hepatorenal insufficiency. One patient died of multiorgan failure. The other 8 patients underwent reoperation, and all survived. Reoperation revealed that all leakages were tiny and had no adverse effect on hemodynamics. In all the patients having reoperation, hemoglobinuria disappeared immediately after the procedure. Surface-scanning electron microscopy of the sewing cuff of the St. Jude Medical prosthesis revealed the rough surface structure of the sewing ring. Because of this irregular, shaggy surface structure, greater shearing forces against erythrocytes can be generated when there is perivalvular leakage.  相似文献   

6.
OBJECTIVE: The purpose of this study was to optimize selection criteria of biologic versus mechanical valve prostheses for aortic valve replacement. METHODS: Retrospective analysis was performed for 841 patients undergoing isolated, first-time aortic valve replacement with Carpentier-Edwards (n = 429) or St Jude Medical (n = 412) prostheses. RESULTS: Patients with Carpentier-Edwards and St Jude Medical valves had similar characteristics. Ten-year survival was similar in each group (Carpentier-Edwards 54% 3% versus St Jude Medical 50% 6%; P =.4). Independent predictors of worse survival were older age, renal or lung disease, ejection fraction less than 40%, diabetes, and coronary disease. Carpentier-Edwards versus St Jude Medical prostheses did not affect survival (P =.4). Independent predictors of aortic valve reoperation were younger age and Carpentier-Edwards prosthesis. The linearized rates of thromboembolism were similar, but the linearized rate of hemorrhage was lower with Carpentier-Edwards prostheses (P <.01). Perivalvular leak within 6 months of operation was more likely with St Jude Medical than with Carpentier-Edwards prostheses (P =.02). Estimated 10-year survival free from valve-related morbidity was better for the St Jude Medical valve in patients aged less than 65 years and was better for the Carpentier-Edwards valve in patients aged more than 65 years. Patients with renal disease, lung disease (in patients more than age 60 years), ejection fraction less than 40%, or coronary disease had a life expectancy of less than 10 years. CONCLUSIONS: For first-time, isolated aortic valve replacement, mechanical prostheses should be considered in patients under age 65 years with a life expectancy of at least 10 years. Bioprostheses should be considered in patients over age 65 years or with lung disease (in patients over age 60 years), renal disease, coronary disease, ejection fraction less than 40%, or a life expectancy less than 10 years.  相似文献   

7.
A 62-year-old man underwent mitral valve replacement with a Starr-Edwards caged-ball prosthesis in 1974. He was asymptomatic until February 2005 when he underwent a new cardiac evaluation because of increasing dyspnea and peripheral edema. The echocardiogram showed a severe aortic regurgitation and a mitral valve prosthesis well functioning. At reoperation, the mitral prosthesis and the aortic valve were replaced with St. Jude Medical((R)) bileaflet mechanical prostheses. At macroscopic and radiographic inspection the Starr-Edwards was free from signs of structural valve degeneration. This case demonstrates the impressive durability of a Starr-Edwards prosthesis in mitral position.  相似文献   

8.
Twenty-five patients (16 male, 9 female) underwent right-sided valve replacement (10 pulmonary valve replacement, 14 tricuspid valve replacement, 3 tricuspid plus pulmonary valve replacement, and 2 replacements of a single atrioventricular valve) at the University of Nebraska Medical Center from June 1977 to December 1986. Twenty-one patients (84%) are long-term survivors with 2,035 months follow-up (range, 41 to 143 months; mean, 96.9 months). Twenty-three Carpentier-Edwards bioprosthetic valves, one Ionescu-Shiley bioprosthetic valve, and nine St. Jude Medical valves were inserted. Follow-up of 17 patients with a Carpentier-Edwards valve ranged from 5 years 9 months to 11 years 9 months (mean, 8 years 11 months). To date there has been one reoperation after 3 years 4 months in this group. One patient who received an Ionescu-Shiley bioprosthesis required re-replacement at 20 months after operation. Three of 4 patients who received St. Jude mechanical valves and are long-term survivors have required replacement after 36 to 56 months. We conclude that the Carpentier-Edwards bioprosthetic valve is a viable option in the right side of the heart in the young age group when annular size is adequate to accommodate an appropriate bioprosthesis.  相似文献   

9.
A bstract Over a 10-year period, between 1986 and 1996, 865 patients underwent primary aortic valve replacement (AVR) with the St. Jude Medical mechanical prosthesis. Patients who had undergone valve replacement with a different type of prosthesis previously were excluded from this study. Patient age ranged from 11 to 79 years. The mean age was 42.9 ± 14.54. The gender distribution was 396 men (45.8%) and 469 women (54.2%). All patients received 2.5 mg/day Coumadin after extubation. A combination of the antiagregant therapy (Dypridamole 3 × 75 mg/day, Asprine 100 mg/day) was added after removal of the chest tubes. The dosage of Coumadin was maintained constant regardless of the prothrombin time (PT) or cardiac rhythm. There were 101 valve-related complications (4.2% per patient year [ppy]) occurring in the late follow-up period. Of these complications; 38 were anticoagulant-related hemorrhage (1.58% ppy), 3 were paravalvular leak (0.12% ppy), and 36 were thromboembolism (1.4% ppy). There were 24 reoperations (0.99% ppy) and 17 late deaths. The linearized late mortality rate was 0.7% ppy. Long-term survival estimates at 5 and 10 years were 97.14 ± 0.82% and 94.86 ± 1.54%, respectively. We conclude from the data that the St. Jude Medical valve may allow the use of a low level of anticoagulation. This study shows that fixed dose oral anticoagulation does not increase the rate of thromboembolism in patients with the St. Jude aortic valve. This protocol does not result in reduction of bleeding complications, however.  相似文献   

10.
According to the literature, the incidence of pannus formation with the St. Jude Medical prosthetic aortic valve has been reported at 0.03% and 0.14% (per patient-year), with no case report of St. Jude Medical prosthetic aortic valve malfunction due to pannus formation. Between 1980 and 1999, 1,186 patients underwent aortic valve replacement at our institute. We encountered 2 aortic valve malfunctions due to pannus formation, including the case of a 53-year-old woman who suffered a St. Jude medical aortic valve malfunction 13 years after the initial operation. A second aortic valve replacement was successful and the postoperative course was uneventful. The possibility of pannus formation on St. Jude Medical aortic valves must thus be considered and its mechanism clarified.  相似文献   

11.
OBJECTIVE: We assessed the clinical results of two bileaflet mechanical valves: the St. Jude Medical (SJM) and the Sorin Bicarbon (Sorin Bicarbon) used either in single mitral valve replacement (MVR) or in double, aortic and mitral, valve replacement (DVR). METHODS: Between September 1990 and November 1995, 217 patients received either a St. Jude Medical (n=134) or a Sorin Bicarbon (n=86): 136 mitral valve replacement with 83 St. Jude Medical and 53 Sorin Bicarbon and 84 double valve replacement with 51 St. Jude Medical and 33 Sorin Bicarbon. There was no difference between both St. Jude Medical and Sorin Bicarbon cohorts in respect of mitral valve physiopathology, etiology of valve disease, associated lesions, echocardiographic and hemodynamic data. The only significant preoperative difference was the age of patients within the double valve replacement group and the size of implanted valves within the mitral valve replacement group. Follow-up was 100% complete with a mean of 39+/-18 months, ranging between 6 and 68 months. The total follow-up was 657 patient-years (pt-y): 396 pt-y in the mitral valve replacement group and 274 pt-y in the double valve replacement group. RESULTS: Hospital mortality (St. Jude Medical: 2.2%; Sorin Bicarbon: 6.9%) and late mortality (St. Jude Medical: 8.4%; Sorin Bicarbon: 6.3%) were not significantly different. Ten deaths were considered valve-related (St. Jude Medical 6, Sorin Bicarbon 4). The estimated 4-yr overall survival, including hospital mortality, was for St. Jude Medical--mitral valve replacement: 89+/-4% and St. Jude Medical--double valve replacement: 93+/-4%, and for Sorin Bicarbon--mitral valve replacement: 87+/-5% and Sorin Bicarbon--double valve replacement: 91+/-5%. The linearized incidence (% per pt-y) of valve-related complications was 6.39 in the St. Jude Medical cohort and 9.2 in the Sorin Bicarbon cohort. The linearized incidence (% pt-y) of the prevalent complication, valve thromboembolism and bleeding, was for St. Jude Medical-mitral valve replacement: 3.41, St. Jude Medical--double valve replacement: 3.16 and for Sorin Bicarbon--mitral valve replacement: 2.17 and Sorin Bicarbon--double valve replacement: 3.67. The differences between each group of an estimated 4-yr freedom from combined thromboembolism and bleeding were not significant (St. Jude Medical--mitral valve replacement: 90+/-4%, St. Jude Medical--double valve replacement: 84+/-6%, and for Sorin Bicarbon--mitral valve replacement: 94+/-3% and Sorin Bicarbon--double valve replacement: 75+/-17%). CONCLUSIONS: In this clinical non-randomized study, there was no evidence of any significant difference between St. Jude Medical and Sorin Bicarbon valves over a 4-yr follow-up.  相似文献   

12.
BACKGROUND: Few reports exist on the results of bileaflet mechanical valve (St. Jude Medical prosthesis; St. Jude Medical, Inc, St. Paul, MN) replacement in long-term dialysis patients. METHODS AND RESULTS: We retrospectively reviewed 12 patients, ranging in age from 50 to 86, undergoing long-term renal dialysis who had also undergone mechanical valve replacement at our institution. Operative procedures included aortic valve replacement, aortic and mitral valve replacement, aortic valve replacement and mitral annuloplasty, mitral valve replacement, and modified Bentall's operation. There was 1 hospital death (8.3%). During the mean follow-up period of 37.1 months (range: 5-87 months), there were 2 noncardiac late deaths. Bleeding from the esophageal varix and from a duodenal ulcer occurred in 1 patient with end-stage liver cirrhosis. There were no other major cases of bleeding or cerebrovascular accidents. There were no valve-related complications. All the survivors demonstrated excellent clinical improvement under the NYHA functional classification. CONCLUSIONS: Our study demonstrated good early and long-term results of mechanical valve replacement in patients undergoing long-term dialysis. These favorable results support the continued use of mechanical valves in dialysis patients.  相似文献   

13.
The St. Jude Medical prosthesis has become one of the most widely used mechanical heart valves because of its excellent haemodynamic function. Although subclinical haemolysis has been described with this prosthesis, there has only been a single report of frank haemolysis in the absence of a paravalvular leak. We report the occurrence of severe haemolysis in five patients following St Jude Medical prosthesis implantation, four of whom had combined aortic and mitral valve replacements. In no patient could the haemolysis be attributed either to a paravalvular leak or an obvious valve malfunction.  相似文献   

14.
From 1989, 4 patients underwent bilateral enlargement of the aortic valve ring for valve replacement. Age at the operation ranged from 2 to 8 (mean 6) years; body weight ranged from 14.9 to 25.4 (mean 19.0) kg. This procedure enabled us to implant a prosthesis 3 to 4 sizes larger (19 to 23 mm) than that measured with the native aortic annulus (13 to 17 mm). There was no late death and no cardiac event over a mean follow-up period of 6.2 years. Pressure gradient across the prosthesis measured by echocardiography was 40 mmHg in 1 patient who underwent aortic valve replacement with the use of 19 mm St. Jude Medical valve at 2 years of age. There was no significant pressure gradient in other 3 patients. All patients showed normal left ventricular function. We conclude that bilateral enlargement of the aortic valve ring for valve replacement has provided good midterm results with no mortality and no cardiac event.  相似文献   

15.
OBJECTIVE: We sought to compare 10-year survival in patients after mitral valve replacement with biologic or mechanical valve prostheses. METHODS: Retrospective survival analysis was performed on data from 1139 consecutive patients older than 18 years of age undergoing mitral valve replacement with Carpentier-Edwards (n = 495; Baxter Healthcare Corp, Irvine, Calif) or St Jude Medical (n = 644; St Jude Medical, Inc, St Paul, Minn) prostheses. RESULTS: The 10-year survival was not statistically different between the patients receiving Carpentier-Edwards valves and those receiving St Jude Medical valves (P =.16). Adjusted survival estimates at 2, 5, and 10 years were 82% +/- 2% (95% confidence intervals, 79%-85%), 69% +/- 2% (95% confidence intervals, 64%-73%), and 42% +/- 3% (95% confidence intervals, 37%-48%), respectively, for the Carpentier-Edwards group and 83% +/- 2% (95% confidence intervals, 80%-86%), 72% +/- 2% (95% confidence intervals, 69%-76%), and 51% +/- 3% (95% confidence intervals, 45%-58%), respectively, for the St Jude Medical group. Predictors of worse survival after mitral valve replacement are older age, lower ejection fraction, presence of class IV congestive heart failure, coronary artery disease, renal disease, smoking history, hypertension, concurrent other valve surgery, and redo heart surgery. CONCLUSION: Choice of biologic or mechanical prosthesis does not significantly affect long-term patient survival after mitral valve replacement.  相似文献   

16.
Between February 1982 and January 1984 27 St. Jude Medical cardiac valve prostheses were implanted in 24 children ranging in age from 5 to 20 years (mean 12.38 years). There were 10 isolated aortic valve replacements, 14 isolated mitral valve replacements and one triple valve replacement (aortic, mitral and tricuspid). There was one operative and four late deaths. All patients were maintained on Aspirin and Dipyridamole from the early postoperative period. There were six documented thromboembolic events occurring in five patients. There were 0.68 thromboembolic events per patient year in the aortic valve group and 0.19 events in the mitral valve group. Because of the significant incidence of thromboembolic events in our patients, we now recommend universal anticoagulation with Coumadin in all pediatric age patients in whom the St. Jude Medical prosthesis is implanted.  相似文献   

17.
Two patients with dysfunction of the St. Jude Medical cardiac valve prosthesis, one in the aortic and one in the mitral position, are presented. In both, one of the valve leaflets was jammed by a very small thrombus that fixed the leaflet in a semiclosed position. Neither patient received anticoagulation postoperatively. Because of the pathological findings in these 2 patients, anticoagulation for patients with a St. Jude Medical valve prosthesis is recommended for life.  相似文献   

18.
OBJECTIVE: The choice of the valve substitute in the tricuspid position remains controversial. A St. Jude Medical valve is a choice of valve substitute and its lower thrombogenicity and excellent hemodynamic performance have been reported even in the tricuspid position. However, little is known of the long-term durability of the St. Jude Medical valve in the tricuspid position. Our long-term experience of tricuspid valve replacement showed the higher thrombogenicity than we had expected, therefore, this study was done to reconsider our strategy for valve choice. METHODS: This study reviewed 23 patient who underwent 25 tricuspid valve replacements with the St. Jude Medical valves from 1980 to 1997. The mean age was 40 years. Eleven patients (48%) were men. There were four in-hospital deaths (17%). The remaining 19 patients were all alive and followed from 2.2 to 19.0 years (mean 11.8 years). RESULTS: The overall survival, including hospital mortality, was 83%, 10 and 15 years after surgery. Valve thrombosis occurred in six patients. Freedom from valve thrombosis was 78 and 70%, 10 and 15 years after surgery, respectively. The linearized rate of the valve thrombosis was 2.9%/patient-years. Six patients required reoperation. The mean interval to reoperation was 9.5 years. Freedom from reoperation was 83% and 75%, 10 and 15 years after surgery, respectively. The linearized rate of the reoperation was 2.8%/patient-years. No structural valve deterioration was found. Echocardiographic study showed that the function of the St. Jude Medical valve without valve-related complications was well maintained. CONCLUSIONS: The higher thrombogenicity of the St. Jude Medical valve in the tricuspid position altered our choice of valve substitutes from the St. Jude Medical valve to a bioprosthesis which is lack of need for anticoagulant therapy except for juvenile patients who are able to maintain potent anticoagulant therapy.  相似文献   

19.
One hundred and thirty-six patients (June 1979, through May 1984) underwent mitral, aortic or double valve replacement and apico-aortic bypass with the St. Jude Medical (SJM) prosthesis, at Ryukyu University Hospital, Okinawa. Operative mortality for the entire group was 4.4 per cent. Late mortality from 1979-1984 was 6.1 per cent. There were no deaths related to mechanical failure. Warfarin anticoagulation was recommended for all patients. The incidence of thromboembolism was 0.76/100 patient years. Post operative catheterization studies in 21 patients one year after operation showed a satisfactory recovery of cardiac function. The SJM valve seems to be the satisfactory artificial valve in present use.  相似文献   

20.
From April 1, 1979 to August 31, 1983, 228 patients underwent isolated aortic (AVR) (118) or mitral (MVR) (90) valve replacements with a new tilting disc valve prosthesis, the St. Jude prosthesis, at the Medical University of South Carolina. Age ranged from 6 to 84 years (mean 49.1 +/- 19.2 AVR, 44.5 +/- 16.5 MVR). Male sex predominated in the AVR group (68%) and female sex in the MVR group (68%). Thirty-five patients (16.8%) had associated coronary bypass surgery (AVR 23.7%, MVR 7.8%). There were seven deaths (3.4%) occurring during the same hospitalization (AVR: 3/118, 2.5%; MVR: 4/90, 4.4%). Follow-up is 97.6% complete and ranges from 1 to 54 months (mean 19.6 +/- 12.4). In the AVR group, nine late deaths have occurred and actuarial survival at 42 months is 86.7 +/- 3.8%. Three patients have sustained thromboembolic episodes for a linearized rate of 1.6% patient-year, and the probability of remaining free of thromboembolism at 42 months is 96.9 +/- 1.8%. The mean improvement in functional class from preoperative to postoperative is 3.1 +/- 0.7 to 1.2 +/- 0.4 (p less than 0.001). In the MVR group, there have been four late deaths, and the actuarial survival at 42 months is 89.3 +/- 3.8%. Two patients have sustained thromboembolic complications for a linearized rate of 1.2%/patient-year, and the probability of remaining free of thromboembolism at 42 months is 97.2 +/- 2%. The mean improvement in functional class from before to after surgery is 3.2 +/- 0.7 to 1.3 +/- 0.5 (p less than 0.001). There have been no thromboses of the St. Jude valve in the mitral or aortic position, no mechanical failures, and no patient has had significant valve-related hemolysis. Because of this experience, the St. Jude Medical heart valve prosthesis is our prosthesis of choice for any patient undergoing valve replacement with a mechanical prosthesis.  相似文献   

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