Aortic Stenosis
Aortic Stenosis
Aortic Stenosis: Etiology
Bicuspid Aortic Valve
Aortic Stenosis - Etiology
Aortic Stenosis: Symptoms
Aortic Stenosis: Physical Findings
Aortic Stenosis: Physical Findings
Severity of Stenosis
Diagnosis: Echocardiogram
Echocardiogram
Doppler estimation of AVA
Cardiac catheteriztion
Low gradient AS
Low gradient AS
Aortic Stenosis: Prognosis
Natural History of Aortic Stenosis
Operative mortality of AVR in the elderly
AVR is recommended in symptomatic patients with severe AS (stage D1) with :
Prosthetic Heart Valves
Caged-Ball Valve
Disc Valve
Bio-prosthetic Valve
Prosthetic Valves
4.17M
Category: medicinemedicine

Aortic Stenosis

1. Aortic Stenosis

2. Aortic Stenosis

Etiology
Physical Examination
Assessing Severity
Natural History
Prognosis
Timing of Surgery

3. Aortic Stenosis: Etiology

Congenital bicuspid valve is the most common
abnormality
Rheumatic heart disease and degeneration
with calcification are found as well
Normal
Bicuspid Ao V
“Normal” geriatric
calcific valve
Rheumatic

4. Bicuspid Aortic Valve

5. Aortic Stenosis - Etiology

Young or middle-aged
patient (4 & 5th decades)
think congenital or
rheumatic
Bicuspid
2% population
3:1 male:female
distribution
Co-existing
coarctation 6% of
patients
Rarely
Unicuspid valve
Sub-aortic stenosis
Discrete
Diffuse (Tunnel)
Old patient think
degenerative (6,7,8th
decades)

6. Aortic Stenosis: Symptoms

Cardinal Symptoms
• Chest pain (angina)
Reduced coronary flow reserve
Increased demand-high afterload
• Syncope/Dizziness (exertional pre-syncope)
Fixed cardiac output
Vasodepressor response
• Dyspnea on exertion & rest
• Impaired exercise tolerance
Other signs of LV failure
• Diastolic & systolic dysfunction

7. Aortic Stenosis: Physical Findings

Intensity DOES NOT predict severity
Presence of thrill DOES NOT predict
severity
“Diamond” shaped, harsh, systolic
crescendo-decrescendo
Decreased, delay & prolongation of pulse
amplitude
Decreasing intensity of S2
S4 (with left ventricular hypertrophy)
S3 (with left ventricular failure)

8. Aortic Stenosis: Physical Findings

S1
S2
Mild-Moderate
S1
S2
Severe

9. Severity of Stenosis

Normal aortic valve area 2.5-3.5 cm2
Mild stenosis 1.5-2.5 cm2
Moderate stenosis 1.0-1.5 cm2
Severe stenosis < 1.0 cm2
Critical stenosis < 0.7 cm2
Onset of symptoms
~0.9 cm2 with CAD
~0.7 cm2 without CAD

10. Diagnosis: Echocardiogram

Etiology
Valve gradient and
area
LVH
Systolic LV function
Diastolic LV function
LA size
Concomitant regional
wall motion
abnormalities
Coarctation associated
with bicuspid AV

11. Echocardiogram

12. Doppler estimation of AVA

13. Cardiac catheteriztion

Gorlin Method
CO
A SEP HR
44.3
P
Simplified: Hakke’s formula AVA=CO/ (p-p gradient)

14. Low gradient AS

Calculated AVA is < 1.0 cm2 , But…
AV gradient is <30mmHg.
Stenotic or not Stenotic?

15. Low gradient AS

16. Aortic Stenosis: Prognosis

Symptom/Sign
Angina
Live
expectancy
5 years
Syncope
2-3 years
Congestive Heart Failure
1-2 years
Therapy: Valve replacement for severe aortic stenosis
Operative mortality (elderly) ~ 4%/Morbidity ~ 3-11%
Event rate in asymptomatic severe AS ~ 1%/year

17. Natural History of Aortic Stenosis

Heart failure
reduces life
expectancy to less
than 2 years
Angina and
syncope reduce life
expectancy
between 2 and 5
years
Rate of progression
@ 0.1 cm2/year

18.

19. Operative mortality of AVR in the elderly

~ 4-24%/year
Risk factors for
operative mortality
• Functional class
• Lack of sinus
rhythm
• HTN
• Pre-existing LV
dysfunction
• Aortic regurgitation
• Concomitant
surgical
procedures:CABG/M
V surgery
• Previous bypass
• Emergency surgery
• CAD
• Female gender

20. AVR is recommended in symptomatic patients with severe AS (stage D1) with :

Decreased systolic opening of a calcified or congenitally
stenotic aortic valve; and
An aortic velocity 4.0 m per second or greater or mean
pressure gradient 40 mm Hg or higher; and
Symptoms of HF, syncope, exertional dyspnea,
angina, or (pre)syncope by history or on exercise testing.

21.

PARTNER Study Design
Symptomatic Severe Aortic Stenosis
Inoperable
Severe Symptomatic AS with
AVA< 0.8 cm2 (EOA index
< 0.5 cm2/m2), and mean
gradient > 40 mmHg
or jet velocity > 4.0 m/s
N = 358
ASSESSMENT:
Transfemoral
Access
1:1 Randomization
TF TAVR
n = 179
V
S
Inoperable defined as risk of
death or serious irreversible
morbidity of AVR as assessed
by cardiologist and two
surgeons exceeding 50%.
Standard
Therapy
n = 179
Primary Endpoint: All-Cause Mortality
Over Length of Trial (Superiority)
• Primary endpoint evaluated when all patients reached one year follow-up.
• After primary endpoint analysis reached, patients were allowed to cross-over to TAVR.

22.

All-Cause Mortality Landmark
Analysis
Standard Rx (n = 179)
TAVR (n =
179)
HR [95% CI] = 0.50 [0.39, 0.65]
p (log rank) < 0.0001
All-Cause Mortality (%)
HR [95% CI] = 0.46 [0.32, 0.66]
p (log rank) < 0.0001
HR [95% CI] = 0.47 [0.24, 0.94]
p (log rank) = 0.028
66.7%
0-1 Year
1-3 Years
3-5 Years
61.1%
50.8%
0
6
12
38.9%
33.4%
30.7%
18
24
30
Months
36
42
48
54
60

23.

24. Prosthetic Heart Valves

25. Caged-Ball Valve

26. Disc Valve

27. Bio-prosthetic Valve

28. Prosthetic Valves

MECHANICAL
• Durable
• Large orifice
• High
thromboembolic
potential
• Best in Left Side
• Chronic warfarin
therapy
BIO-PROSTHETIC
• Not durable
• Smaller
orifice/functional
stenosis
• Low
thromboembolic
potential
• Consider in elderly
• Best in tricuspid
position
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