Calcification of aortic versus mitral porcine bioprosthetic heart valves: a radiographic study comparing amounts of calcific deposits in valves explanted from the same patient.

Autor: Cipriano PR, Billingham ME, Miller DC
Jazyk: angličtina
Zdroj: The American journal of cardiology [Am J Cardiol] 1984 Nov 01; Vol. 54 (8), pp. 1030-2.
DOI: 10.1016/s0002-9149(84)80139-3
Abstrakt: Calcium detected by radiography was compared in 10 pairs of aortic and mitral glutaraldehyde-treated porcine bioprosthetic heart valves explanted from 10 patients (7 men and 3 women), aged 19 to 68 years (mean 43). Both valves of 6 pairs of valves had undergone primary tissue failure (revealed by cardiac catheterization and angiography) and 1 valve of the other 4 pairs of valves had undergone primary tissue failure. These porcine valves had been implanted from 2 1/4 to 9 years (mean 5 3/4). All 20 explanted valves contained calcium. The grade of calcium was the same in 4 pairs of valves (grade 2+ or 3+), and 1 grade different in 4 pairs of valves (grade 1+ to 4+), with the greater calcium evenly divided between the 2 valve positions. There was more than 1 grade greater mitral valve calcium in 2 pairs of valves (grade 3+ and 4+ mitral vs 1+ and 2+ aortic, respectively). Thus, calcium is usually present in both aortic and mitral valve positions when bioprosthetic valves of this type in either valve position fail as a result of primary tissue failure, and radiographic calcium in porcine bioprosthetic valves is usually similar in grade in both the aortic and mitral valve positions.
Databáze: MEDLINE