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Aortic valve replacement is a
surgical procedure in which a patient's aortic valve is
replaced by a different valve. The aortic valve can be
affected by a range of diseases and require aortic valve
replacement. The valve can either become leaky (regurgitant
or insufficient) or stuck partially shut (stenotic).
Aortic valve replacement currently requires open heart
surgery. As of 2006, percutaneous aortic valve
replacement is being researched, which allows the
implantion of valves using a catheter without open heart
surgery.
Types of Heart Valves
Mechanical, Tissue and Homograft Valves
There are two basic types of
artificial heart valve, mechanical valves and tissue
valves. Tissue heart valves are usually made from animal
tissues, either animal heart valve tissue or animal
pericardial tissue. The tissue is treated to prevent
rejection and to prevent calcification.
There are alternatives to animal
tissue valves. In some cases a human aortic valve can be
implanted. These are called homografts. Homograft valves
are donated by patients and harvested after the patient
expires. The durability of homograft valves is probably
the same for porcine tissue valves. Another procedure
for aortic valve replacement is the Ross procedure or
pulmonary autograft. The Ross procedure involves going
to surgery to have the aortic valve removed and
replacing it with the patient's own pulmonary valve. A
pulmonary homograft (a pulmonary valve taken from a
cadaver) is then used to replace the patients own
pulmonary valve.
Durability
Mechanical valves are designed to
outlast the patient, and have typically been
stress-tested to last several hundred years. Tissue
valves will typically last between 10-15 years. In
younger patients, tissue valves will wear out faster.
For this reason, older patients are often recommended
tissue valves.
Surgical Procedure
Aortic valve replacement is most
frequently done through a median sternotomy, meaning the
chestbone is sawed through. Once the pericardium has
been opened, the patient is placed on cardiopulmonary
bypass machine, also referred to as the heart-lung
machine. This machine takes over the task of breathing
for the patient and pumping his blood around while the
surgeon replaces the heart valve.
Once the patient is on bypass, an
incision is made in the aorta. The surgeon then removes
the patient's diseased aortic valve and a mechanical or
tissue valve is put in its place. Once the valve is in
place and the aorta has been closed, the patient is
taken off the heart-lung machine. Transesophageal
echocardiogram (or TEE, an ultra-sound of the heart done
through the esophagus) can be used to verify that the
new valve is functioning properly. Pacing wires are
usually put in place, so that the heart can be manually
paced should any complications arise after surgery.
Drainage tubes are also inserted to drain fluids from
the chest and pericardium following surgery. These are
usually removed within 36 hours while the pacing wires
are generally left in place until right before the
patient is discharged from the hospital.
Hospital Stay and Recovery Time
Immediately after aortic valve
replacement, the patient will frequently stay in a
Cardiothoracic Intensive Care Unit for 12-36 hours.
After this, the patient is often moved to a
lower-dependency unit and then to a cardiac surgery
ward. Total time spent in hospital following surgery is
usually between 4 and 10 days, unless complications
arise.
Recovery from aortic valve
replacement will take 1-3 months if the patient is in
good health. Patients are advised not to do any heavy
lifting for 6-8 weeks following surgery to avoid
damaging the sternum (breast bone) while it heals.
From
Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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