(Circulation. 2005;112:3919-3929.)
© 2005 American Heart Association, Inc.
Valvular Heart Disease |
From the Baylor Heart and Vascular Institute (W.C.R., J.M.K.) and the Departments of Pathology and Medicine (W.C.R.), Baylor University Medical Center, Dallas, Tex; the Pathology Branch (W.C.R.), National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute, National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, Md; the Departments of Pathology and Medicine (W.C.R.), Georgetown University Medical Center, Washington, DC; and the Institute for Health Care Research and Improvement (C.H.), Baylor Health Care System, Dallas, Tex.
Correspondence to William C. Roberts, MD, Baylor Heart and Vascular Institute, Baylor University Medical Center, 3500 Gaston Ave, Dallas, TX 75246. E-mail wc.roberts{at}baylorhealth.edu
Received February 16, 2005; revision received September 2, 2005; accepted October 20, 2005.
Background Aortic valve replacement (AVR) for patients with aortic stenosis (AS) has now been available for 45 years. During this period, indications for the procedure have changed.
Methods and Results Operatively excised stenotic aortic valves (with or without associated aortic regurgitation and without associated mitral valve disease) from 3 different medical centers (National Institutes of Health, Georgetown University Medical Center, and Baylor University Medical Center) were examined during 2 different time periods by the same physician to compare aortic valve structure, valve weight, age at operation, preoperative transvalvular peak pressure gradient, calculated aortic valve area, and whether simultaneous coronary artery bypass grafting (CABG) was performed. Compared with the first 3 decades (19611990) of AVR, patients having this operation during the fourth and fifth decades (19912004) had a lower frequency of congenitally malformed aortic valves, a higher frequency of tricuspid aortic valves, an older age, valves of lighter weight and lower transvalvular peak pressure gradients, and more often simultaneous CABG.
Conclusions Although patients having isolated AVR for AS in the present and last decade were older than in the first 3 decades of valve replacement surgery, congenitally malformed aortic valves continue to be more common than tricuspid aortic valves, but the degree of AS and therefore, valve weight was significantly lower than in the earlier decades.
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