Cases reported "Prosthesis Failure"

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1/126. thrombosis of mitral valve prosthesis presenting as abdominal pain.

    A 67-year-old woman presented with abdominal pain, anemia, and leukocytosis. Five years previously, the patient had undergone mitral valve replacement with a St. Jude bileaflet mechanical prosthesis. After her admission, echocardiography confirmed an immobile leaflet of the prosthetic valve. At urgent surgery, thrombosis and pannus, obstructing the disc, were found, and the mechanical valve was replaced with a bioprosthesis. The incidence of mitral valve thrombosis is low, ranging from 0.1% to 5.7% per patient per year. patients who receive inadequate anticoagulation, particularly with valve prostheses in the mitral position, have an increased risk for thrombus or pannus formation. Presentation varies, from symptoms of congestive heart failure or systemic embolization, to fever or no symptoms. New or worsening symptoms in a patient with a prosthetic heart valve should raise concerns about prosthetic dysfunction. Aggressive investigation and, if indicated, urgent or emergency surgery for treatment can be lifesaving.
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ranking = 1
keywords = bile
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2/126. Recurrent prosthetic valve thrombosis: importance of prolonged Doppler echocardiography examination for diagnosis.

    In a 9-month period a 52-year-old woman was admitted on 3 occasions with thrombotic obstruction of a Medtronic Hall aortic valve prosthesis. On the first occasion the diagnosis was clinically obvious; on the second occasion prosthetic valve malfunction was detected fortuitously on Doppler echocardiography; on the third occasion the diagnosis was made after prolonged Doppler echocardiographic examination. The patient was treated with thrombolysis, surgical thrombectomy, and aortic valve re-replacement on the 3 occasions, respectively.
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ranking = 39.068648251194
keywords = obstruction
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3/126. Dynamic obstruction, an unusual complication after aortic valve replacement with a stentless porcine valve.

    In the early nineties, the stentless porcine aortic bioprosthesis has been reintroduced successfully. Because of the limited experience, knowledge of clinical complications is limited. Therefore, we describe an unusual complication of dynamic obstruction after aortic valve replacement with a stentless porcine valve in a 70 year old man 18 months after implantation. We discuss the complications of stentless aortic prostheses known so far, describe operative techniques used and their characteristic two dimensional echocardiographic images.
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ranking = 195.34324125597
keywords = obstruction
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4/126. Replacement of an immobile prosthetic mitral valve: a case report.

    A mechanical prosthetic heart valve can become acutely obstructed despite anticoagulation therapy. This can be a life-threatening complication. We report the case of a 38-year-old woman who survived obstruction of her Sorin prosthetic mitral valve. She was admitted to the hospital because of severe pulmonary edema. On auscultation, mechanical valve sounds were absent. Transthoracic echocardiography showed an immobile mechanical valve. The patient suffered a cardiac arrest while being prepared for surgery, but she underwent successful mitral valve replacement after cardiopulmonary resuscitation. When patients with prosthetic mitral valves present with acute dyspnea, the possibility of an obstructed prosthetic valve must be considered in the differential diagnosis.
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ranking = 41.568648251194
keywords = obstruction, bile
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5/126. A 22-year course of the Kay-Shiley disc valve with muscle guard at the mitral position.

    Almost 33 years have elapsed since the introduction of the Kay-Shiley disc valve in japan. Following the development of pyrolite carbon, the Kay-Shiley valve is no longer in clinical use. We report the case of a female patient who had had an isolated mitral valve replacement with the Kay-Shiley disc valve with single muscle guard 22 years previously. After numerous thromboembolic episodes with the Kay-Shiley disc valve, a successful reoperation was done with the CarboMedics valve. The explanted valve revealed that the grooved occluder disc had a loosely adherent clot. The thromboembolism is a notorious complication associated with this valve. We recommend re-replacement of the Kay-Shiley valve whenever possible.
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ranking = 0.74081364578107
keywords = duct
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6/126. Leaflet escape in a TEKNA and an original duromedics bileaflet valve.

    We report a case of leaflet escape in an Edwards-TEKNA bileaflet valve, in the mitral position. The examination findings of the explanted valve are compared with a similar case of leaflet escape in an original Edward-Duromedics prosthesis. Based on our findings alone, it is not certain whether the TEKNA valve continues to have a higher risk for fracture.
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ranking = 2.5
keywords = bile
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7/126. dissection in a right sided porcine-valved Dacron conduit.

    Seventeen years after corrective surgery for a double outlet right ventricle and pulmonary stenosis, a 30-year-old patient was admitted for reoperation for a critical stenosis of a porcine-valved Dacron conduit between the right ventricle and pulmonary artery. A residual ventricular septal defect was present. Induction of anaesthesia resulted in an inadequate pulmonary flow and uncontrollable ventricular arrhythmias. At autopsy the conduit showed a dissection between the conduit wall and the peel formation, leaving a residual lumen with a diameter of less than a third of the original. patients with a right sided bioprosthetic valved conduit must be evaluated regularly and operated before the stenosis becomes critical.
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ranking = 0.74081364578107
keywords = duct
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8/126. Disruption of the silver and non-silver coated sewing cuff of a new generation bileaflet valve prosthesis during aortic valve replacement: report on four cases.

    OBJECTIVES: New generation bileaflet valve prostheses with a silver-coated sewing cuff like the St Jude Medical (SJM((R)) Regent) model are designed to offer a larger valvular orifice as well as a better resistance to postoperative prosthetic endocarditis, at the expense of a smaller sewing cuff. methods AND RESULTS: We report on four cases of aortic valve replacement where during the implantation procedure the fixation cuff disrupted, leading to the exchange of all four valve prostheses. This happened three times with silver- coated sewing cuffs and after withdrawal of the silver- coated cuff prostheses from the market, once with a non silver- coated sewing cuff. This was due to the arbitrary cutting of the cuff fixation suture at the ventricular side of the prosthesis, although the implantation was performed according to the recommendations of the company. This problem didn't occur previously, using other models of the same manufacturer, although the sewing cuff had been fixed in the same technique. CONCLUSION: Fixation of smaller sewing cuffs of mechanical valve prostheses with a critically exposed fixation suture at the ventricular side of the prosthesis represents a significant risk for disruption during the implantation process through cut off by chance. We recommend meticulous inspection of the sewing cuff for signs of disruption before seating the valve into position. During follow-up particular attention should be paid to valve dislodgement and leakage. The company was informed and advised by us to modify the fixation of the prosthetic annulus of the SJM((R)) Regent valve, which has led to an alternative cuff design, called the SJM Flex cuff.
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ranking = 2.5
keywords = bile
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9/126. pressure damping, a "billowing" septum, and an eerie silence: perioperative, intermittent obstruction of a mitral valve prosthesis.

    This case, involving a 74 year old man who underwent mitral valve and aortic valve replacements, provides detailed insight into the perioperative echocardiographic and haemodynamic changes occurring when a mitral valve prosthesis intermittently obstructs. It illustrates the early sequence of electromechanical dissociation which would lead to cardiac arrest should a tilting disc prosthesis be immobilised in the closed position.
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ranking = 156.27459300478
keywords = obstruction
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10/126. Transvenous pacing lead-induced thrombosis: a series of cases with a review of the literature.

    Although transvenous pacing is a safe treatment modality for bradyarrhythmias, serious thrombotic and embolic complications are reported to occur in 0.6-3.5% of cases. We describe 5 cases of pacemaker-associated thrombosis, 3 with a superior vena cava syndrome (SVC), 1 with an axillary vein thrombosis and 1 with a thrombus attached to the pacing lead in the right atrium. All of the patients were initially treated with intravenous heparin which proved successful as the sole treatment in only the least severe case (axillary vein thrombosis). One of the patients with SVC obstruction was successfully treated with intravenous heparin followed by thrombolytic therapy. The remaining 3 cases (2 SVC syndromes and 1 right atrial thrombus) required surgical removal of thrombus and pacing leads. Both of the patients with evidence of infection were in the group for whom failure of medical therapy necessitated surgery.
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ranking = 39.068648251194
keywords = obstruction
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