2Department of Internal Medicine (Cardiology) and Pathology, Baylor University Medical Center,
Baylor Scott & White Health, Dallas, Texas, United States
1Baylor Scott & White Heart and Vascular Institute, Dallas, Texas, United States
Corresponding author details:
William C Roberts
Baylor Scott & White Heart and Vascular Institute
Texas,United States
Copyright: © 2021 Salam YM, et al. This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4. 0 international License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
Described herein is a 59-year-old man who underwent replacement of both
left-sided cardiac valves, one with a mechanical prosthesis and the other with a
bioprosthesis, thus losing for the patient the advantageous features of both substitute
cardiac valves and gaining the disadvantages of each?
Valve Replacement; Aortic Valve; Mitral Valve; Bioprosthesis; Mechanical Prosthesis
When both left-sided cardiac valves are replaced it is desirable to replace both
valves with the same type of substitute valve, either both with a bioprosthesis or both
with a mechanical prosthesis. We describe herein a patient in whom one left-sided
valve was replaced with a bioprosthesis, and the other, with a mechanical prosthesis,
and we discuss the logic, or lack thereof, of such a choice.
A 59-year-old man with severe (peak transvalvular gradient 77 mm Hg by
echocardiogram and 58 mm Hg by catheterization) aortic valve stenosis and moderate
mitral valve regurgitation (by echocardiography) underwent replacement of the
heavily calcified congenitally bicuspid aortic valve with a bioprosthesis (21mm St.
Jude Epic tissue valve) and the anatomically-normal (except for mild mitral annular
calcium) mitral valve initially with a bioprosthesis (29 mm St. Jude Epic tissue valve).
The patient was weaned from bypass and the transesophageal echocardiogram
showed a 13 mm Hg mean transmitral gradient. The previously implanted tissue valve
in the mitral valve was then replaced with a 31-mm St. Jude mechanical prosthesis.
Four days postoperatively echocardiogram showed a 24 mm Hg mean transaortic
valve gradient and a 3 mm Hg mean transmitral gradient when the ejection fraction
was 33% (Figure 1). The patient returned home 9 days postoperatively and 12 months
later was asymptomatic and working full-time as an auto-mechanic.
Figure 1: Post-cardiopulmonary by pass intraoperative TEE images of bioprosthetic
mitral valve with turbulent inflow by colour Doppler (left panel) and a mean gradient
of 12 mmHg by continuous wave Doppler (right panel). A second pump run was then
undertaken to place a mechanical mitral valve with a mean gradient 3 mmHg.
In 1986 Roberts and Sullivan[1] described necropsy findings in 54 patients who had replacement of both left-sided cardiac valves, 12 of whom had replacement of one valve with a mechanical prosthesis and the other by a bioprosthesis. The virtue, of course, of the mechanical prosthesis is that it does not wear out. Its drawback is that it requires the patient to be on anticoagulants indefinitely. The virtue of the bioprosthesis, of course, is that chronic anticoagulation is avoided; its drawback is that it wears out. So, with the limitations for each of the 2 substitute cardiac valves, how could any patient today undergoing replacement of both left-sided valves have both a mechanical valve and a bioprosthesis implanted, thus acquiring the disadvantages of both types of substitute valves and losing the advantages of each.This report describes still another patient having double left-sided valve replacement utilizing one mechanical prosthesis and one bioprosthesis, an inappropriate combination.In 1988 Roberts[2] published an editorial entitled “The logic of using either two mechanical valves or two bioprosthetic valves for replacement of both mitral and aortic valves” and emphasized that “… the placing of 1 bioprosthetic valve and 1 mechanical valve in the same patient translates into the loss for the patient of each of the advantages of the mechanical and bioprosthetic valves, and, at the same time, the gain for the patient of the disadvantages of each of the two types of substitute cardiac valves”.
Bortolotti and colleagues[3] in 1988 reported 91 patients who
had undergone combined mitral and aortic valve replacement
utilizing a porcine bioprosthesis in the mitral position and
mechanical tilting-disc prosthesis in the aortic valve position. Of
the 91 patients, 15 (17%) died in hospital. Of the 91 patients in
whom the mitral valve was replaced with a bioprosthesis, 27 (30%)
had dysfunction of the bioprosthesis and it was subsequently
replaced in 23 patients (25%), whereas the mechanical valve in the aortic valve position was subsequently replaced in 2 patients
(2%). There were 13 anticoagulant-related hemorrhages, 2 (10%)
of which were fatal. Thromboembolic complications occurred in
9 patients, 5 of which were fatal. Thus it is evident that in the long
term the risk of reoperation for bioprosthetic failure is added to
the risk of long-term anti-coagulation. Since 1988 (thirty years
ago) we have not seen a publication discussing the inadvisability
of replacing one cardiac valve with a mechanized prosthesis and
another valve in the same patient with a bioprosthesis.
No non-author contributions to disclose.
Dr. William C. Roberts and Yusuf M. Salam were the primary
writers and researchers on this paper. Dr. Paul A. Grayburn
provided figure 1 and the attached figure legend.
1. Roberts WC, Sullivan MF (1986) Clinical and necropsy observations early after simultaneous replacement of the mitral and aortic valves. Am J Cardiol. 58(11):1067–1084.
2. Roberts WC (1988)The logic of using either two mechanical valves or two bioprosthetic valves for replacement of bothmitral and aortic valves. Am J Cardiol. 61(10):871.
3. Bortolotti U, Milano A, Mazzucco A, Guerra F, Magni A, et al.(1988) Results of simultaneous replacement of one left-sidedcardiac valve with a mechanical prosthesis and the other leftsided valve with a bioprosthesis. Am J Cardiol. 62(16):1130–1132.
Copyright © 2020 Boffin Access Limited.