Stuck Bioprosthetic Aortic Valve--A New Entity? A Case Report (original) (raw)
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Prosthetic aortic valve: A bone in the system
Revista Portuguesa de Cardiologia, 2015
We report a case of a 73-year-old female patient admitted to the surgical department for a splenic abscess. She had a history of a mechanical aortic valve implanted two years earlier. During the diagnostic work-up, the patient underwent a transesophageal echocardiogram that revealed the presence of multiple paravalvular abscesses, establishing the diagnosis of prosthetic valve endocarditis. A few days later, the echocardiogram was repeated due to a new-onset systolic-diastolic murmur. A large pseudoaneurysm and significant periprosthetic regurgitation were now noted and the patient was referred for cardiac surgery. The microbiologic exam revealed the presence of Streptococcus milleri, usually found in the gastrointestinal flora and a known pathogenic agent of endocarditis. Interestingly, the patient had had a foreign body (bone fragment) removed from her esophagus a few weeks earlier, which was the probable portal of entry for this infective endocarditis.
Ventriculo-atrial defect after bioprosthetic aortic valve replacement
Journal of Cardiothoracic Surgery, 2014
We present a case of a 71-year-old Caucasian male with a ventriculo-atrial defect due to infective endocarditis, originating from his aortic root near a bioprosthetic aortic valve, implanted 4 years earlier. Ventriculo-atrial defects are rare and can occur after endocarditis with abscess formation, usually in native tissue. We report a ventriculo-atrial defect due to a paravalvular aortic prosthetic defect, secondary to inflammation, a novel third type of a Gerbode defect. Case presentation, clinical decision making and surgical approach are discusses in this report.
Early Thrombotic Stenosis of Aortic Bioprosthetic Valves: Report of Two Cases
Mayo Clinic Proceedings, 1993
Thrombotic stenosis of a Carpentier-Edwards porcine bioprosthesis occurred in two patients within 3 months after aortic valve replacement. Both patients underwent successful replacement of the aortic prosthesis. Although previously reported, this complication of aortic porcine bioprostheses is uncommon. Thrombotic stenosis of porcine bioprosthetic valves early after cardiac operation is a rare but serious complication that is not well recognized. Herein we describe two cases of early thrombosis of porcine valves in the aortic position 8 and 10 weeks after implantation.
[A rare case of two mechanisms of prosthetic valve dysfunction in the same patient]
Revista portuguesa de cardiologia : orgão oficial da Sociedade Portuguesa de Cardiologia = Portuguese journal of cardiology : an official journal of the Portuguese Society of Cardiology, 2013
Prosthetic valve dysfunction is a significant clinical event. Determining its etiological mechanism and severity can be difficult. The authors present the case of a 50-year-old man, with two mechanical valve prostheses in aortic and mitral positions, hospitalized for decompensated heart failure. He had a long history of rheumatic multivalvular disease and had undergone three heart surgeries. On admission, investigation led to a diagnosis of severe dysfunction of both mechanical prostheses with different etiologies and mechanisms: pannus formation in the prosthetic aortic valve and intermittent dysfunction of the mitral prosthesis due to interference of a ruptured chorda tendinea in closure of the disks. The patient was reoperated, leading to significant improvement in functional class.