Pulmonary Hypertension in Patients Undergoing Transcatheter Aortic Valve Replacement
Author(s) -
Mario Gössl,
Garvan C. Kane,
William J. Mauermann,
David R. Holmes
Publication year - 2015
Publication title -
circulation cardiovascular interventions
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.621
H-Index - 95
eISSN - 1941-7632
pISSN - 1941-7640
DOI - 10.1161/circinterventions.114.002253
Subject(s) - medicine , cardiology , pulmonary hypertension , aortic valve replacement , stenosis
Pulmonary hypertension (PH) is a significant, often irreversible, risk factor of early and late morbidity and mortality in patients undergoing transcatheter aortic valve replacement (TAVR). The widely used Society of Thoracic Surgeons (STSs) Predicted Risk of Mortality (STS-Predicted Risk of Mortality) risk score does not include PH and the commonly associated right ventricular (RV) dysfunction. Therefore, procedural risk of patients with severe PH undergoing TAVR is probably underestimated and consideration of its risk relies heavily on clinical, procedural, and anecdotal experience. In addition, literature on the management of patients with severe PH undergoing TAVR is scarce.Using 1 of our recent transapical TAVR patients as an illustrative example we, therefore, sought to discuss recent data on outcomes of patients with severe PH undergoing TAVR, emerging TAVR risk scores that incorporate severe PH and other TAVR-specific risk factors as well as a guideline on how to clinically manage patients with severe PH undergoing TAVR who often present as difficult hemodynamic challenges.An 82-year-old (body mass index, 26.8 kg/m2) insulin-dependent diabetic female (151 cm, 62 kg) with symptomatic severe calcific aortic stenosis (echocardiographically derived: mean transvalvular gradient 43 mm Hg, maximal velocity 4.3 m/s and a calculated valve area of 0.5 cm2) and preserved left ventricular (LV) function with an ejection fraction of 60%. She has severe coronary artery disease, is status post coronary artery bypass graft surgery with patent grafts to left anterior descending and ramus intermedius; the circumflex artery is only moderately diseased and the right coronary artery is small, nondominant with mild, diffuse disease (u003c1.5 mm in size). The right heart hemodynamics are summarized in Figure 1 and Table 1 with mild-to-moderate right heart failure (increased RV end-diastolic pressure) and severe mixed PH with a low-normal cardiac output. Her pulmonary artery wedge pressure (PAWP) was high without a …
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