Stented Bioprosthetic Valve Hemodynamics: Is the Supra-Annular Implant Better than the Intra-Annular? Department of Cardiopulmonary Sciences, A.O. S. Maria della Misericordia, Udine, Italy |
|||||||
Background and aim of the study: The use of stented bioprostheses
for aortic valve replacement (AVR) in elderly patients with a small aortic
annulus may result in unsatisfactory hemodynamic performance of the prosthesis.
To overcome this limitation, new bioprostheses have been designed for
complete supra-annular implantation, but the actual hemodynamic advantage
of the supra-annular implant over the intra-annular has not been fully
investigated. Accordingly, the hemodynamic performance of the same stented
bioprosthesis (except for sewing ring design) implanted in the supra-annular
and conventional intra-annular seating was compared. |
p = 0.44) and mean transprosthetic flow rate (246 ± 70
and 218 ± 58 ml/s; p = 0.12). Mean (8 ±
3 and 19 ± 8 mmHg, p <0.0001), and peak (17 ± 6 and 40
± 13 mmHg; p <0.0001) transprosthetic gradients were lower, and
mean effective orifice area (EOA) (1.78 ± 0.4 and 1.45 ±
0.5 cm2, p = 0.006) was higher in patients with supra-annular implants
than in those with intra-annular. The incidence of patient-prosthesis mismatch
(EOA index <0.85 cm2/m2) decreased from 50% to 34% (p <0.0001), with
no case of severe mismatch using the supra-annular implant. During follow
up, a left ventricular mass reduction occurred in patients with supra-annular
implants (from 225 ± 110 to 173 ± 59 g/m2; p <0.03), but
not in patients with intra-annular implants (173 ±
62 and 186 ± 64 g/m2; p = 0.87) |
||||||
|
|||||||