Prosthetic valves: aortic and mitral Flashcards
Prosthetic valves: aortic and mitral
This patient has recently been treated for dyspnoea/chest pain/syncope. Please examine his cardiovascular system.
Clinical signs in prosthetic valves
a. Audible prosthetic clicks (metal) on approach
b. Scars on inspection
1- Midline sternotomy (CABG, AVR, MVR)
2- Lateral thoracotomy (MVR, mitral valvotomy, coarctation repair, BT shunt)
3- Subclavicular (Pacemaker, AICD)
4- Anticubital fossa (angiography)
–> Also look in the wrist and groins for angiography scars/bruising and legs for saphenous vein harvest used in bypass grafts.
C. Anticoagulation: bruises (metal valve) and anaemia
Aortic valve replacement Auscultation
- A metal prosthetic closing click (CC) is heard instead of A2.
- There may be an opening click (OC) and ejection systolic flow murmur.
- A bioprosthesetic valve often has normal heart sounds.
-
Abnormal findings:
=> AR
=> Decreased intensity of the closing click (clot or vegetation)
Mitral valve replacement Auscultation
- A metal prosthetic closing click is heard instead of S1.
- An opening click may be heard in early diastole followed by a low-frequency diastolic rumble.
-
Abnormal findings:
=> MR
=> Decreased intensity of the closing click.
Operative mortality in valve replacement
3–5%
Late complications of Prosthetic Valves
1. Thromboembolus: 1–2% per annum despite warfarin
2. Bleeding: fatal 0.6%, major 3%, minor 7% per annum on warfarin
3. Bioprosthetic dysfunction and LVF: usually within 10 years, can be treated percutaneously (valve‐in‐valve)
4. Haemolysis: mechanical red blood cell destruction against the metal valve
5. Infective endocarditis:
⚬⚬ Early infective endocarditis (<2/12 post‐op) can be due to Staphylococcus epidermidis from skin
⚬⚬ Late infective endocarditis is often due to Strep. viridans by haematogenous spread
⚬⚬> A second valve replacement is usually required to treat this complication
⚬⚬> Mortality of prosthetic valve endocarditis approaches 60%
6. Atrial fibrillation: particularly if MVR
Choice of valve replacement (Metal Vs Procaine)
Metal:
- For: Durable
- Against: needs warfarin
- Indicated for: Young Pt/on warfarin, e.g. for AF
Procaine:
- For: No warfarin
- Against: Less durable
- Indicated for:
- Elderly >65 for MVR and 70 for AVR
- at risk of haemorrhage
- poor complaince to meds
- young women of childbearing age
scars on the Chest for Heart conditions
- Midline sternotomy (CABG, AVR, MVR)
- Lateral thoracotomy (MVR, mitral valvotomy, coarctation repair, BT shunt)
- Subclavicular (Pacemaker, AICD)
- Anticubital fossa (angiography)
Also look in the wrist and groins for angiography scars/bruising and legs for saphenous vein harvest used in bypass grafts.