REC: Interventional Cardiology (English Ed.) (May 2022)

Pulmonary valve-in-valve procedure after fractured biological prosthetic valve

  • Pedro Betrián Blasco,
  • Gerard Marti Aguasca,
  • José Manuel Siurana Rodríguez

DOI
https://doi.org/10.24875/RECICE.M21000253
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 4, no. 2
pp. 161 – 162

Abstract

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While performing aortic valve-in-valve procedures the fracture of certain surgical biological valve annuli has been widely reported regarding the implantation of a larger percutaneous valve with a better hemodynamic profile. The pulmonary valve-in-valve technique has not been around that much, but its role is more important because it allows «small» valve implantation in pediatric patients who later progress into significant somatic growths. We present 2 cases after obtaining the express consent of the patients or, if minors, of their legal tutorss. Case #1 is a 15-year-old patient with Fallot’s tetralogy, and previous surgical implantation of a 19 mm Carpentier Magna Ease valve (Edwards Lifesciences Corp., United States) (internal lumen of 17 mm) at 11 years old. Severe stenosis and moderate regurgitation. The annulus ruptured with a 20 mm x 20 mm Atlas Gold balloon (Becton, Dickinson and Company Franklin Lakes, United States) inflated at 22 atm, and a 23 mm Edwards S3 valve was implanted (figure 1A, angiography of pulmonary artery; figure 1B, rupture with balloon; figure 1C, previous ruptured valve [arrow]; figure 1D, new valve; and videos 1-4 of the supplementary data). Figure 1. Case #2 is a 24-year-old patient with Fallot’s tetralogy and previous surgical implantation of a 21 mm Carpentier...