Aortic Stenosis
1979CHAPTER 261
Bicuspid aortic valve (BAV) disease affects as many as 0.5–1.4% of
the general population and is accompanied by an associated aortopathy in ~30-40% of individuals, a disease process expressed as root or
ascending aortic aneurysm formation or descending thoracic aortic
coarctation. An increasing number of childhood survivors of congenital heart disease present later in life with valvular dysfunction. The
global burden of valvular heart disease will continue to progress.
As is true for many other chronic health conditions, disparities
in access to and quality of care for patients with valvular heart disease have been well documented, especially for those patients with
rheumatic heart disease in low- and middle-income countries. In the
Society for Thoracic Surgeons (STS)/American College of Cardiology
(ACC) Transcatheter Valve Therapy (TVT) registry, blacks comprise
<5% of patients in the United States who have received a transcatheter
valve for AS. Management decisions and outcome differences based
on age, sex, race, and geography require intensification of educational
efforts and prioritization of resources.
The role of the physical examination in the evaluation of patients
with valvular heart disease is also considered in Chaps. 42 and 239;
of electrocardiography (ECG) in Chap. 240; of echocardiography and
other noninvasive imaging techniques in Chap. 241; and of cardiac
catheterization and angiography in Chap. 242.
AORTIC STENOSIS
Aortic stenosis (AS) is the most common valve lesion among adult
patients with chronic valvular heart disease; the majority of adult
patients with symptomatic, valvular AS are male.
■ ETIOLOGY AND PATHOGENESIS
(Table 261-1) AS in adults is due to degenerative calcification of the
aortic cusps and occurs most commonly on a substrate of congenital
disease (BAV), chronic (trileaflet) deterioration, or previous rheumatic
inflammation. A pathologic study of specimens removed at the time
of aortic valve replacement (AVR) for AS in adults showed that 53%
were bicuspid and 4% were unicuspid. The process of aortic valve
deterioration and calcification is not a passive one, but rather one that
shares many features with vascular atherosclerosis, including endothelial dysfunction, lipid accumulation, inflammatory cell activation,
cytokine release, and upregulation of several signaling pathways
(Fig. 261-3). Eventually, a fibrocalcific response is established
wherein collagen is deposited and valvular myofibroblasts differentiate phenotypically into osteoblasts and actively produce
bone matrix proteins that allow for the deposition of calcium
hydroxyapatite crystals. Genetic polymorphisms involving the
vitamin D receptor, the estrogen receptor in postmenopausal
women, interleukin 10, and apolipoprotein E4 have been linked
to the development of calcific AS, and a strong familial clustering
of cases with trileaflet valves has been reported from western
France. Several traditional atherosclerotic risk factors have also
been associated with the development and progression of calcific AS, including hypertension, low-density lipoprotein (LDL)
cholesterol, lipoprotein a (Lp[a]), diabetes mellitus, smoking,
chronic kidney disease, and the metabolic syndrome. In a Canadian observational cohort study, the incidence of severe AS was
144 per 100,000 person-years. Hypertension, diabetes mellitus,
and dyslipidemia accounted for approximately one-third of the
population-attributable risk for severe AS. The presence of aortic
valve sclerosis (focal thickening and calcification of the leaflets
not severe enough to cause obstruction) is associated with an
excess risk of cardiovascular death and myocardial infarction
(MI) among persons aged >65. Approximately 30% of persons
aged >65 years exhibit some degree of aortic valve sclerosis. Rate and
extent of progression to valve obstruction (stenosis) vary among individual patients.
Rheumatic disease of the aortic leaflets produces commissural fusion,
sometimes resulting in a bicuspid-appearing valve. This condition, in
turn, makes the leaflets more susceptible to trauma and ultimately
leads to fibrosis, calcification, and further narrowing. By the time
obstruction to left ventricular (LV) outflow causes serious clinical disability, the valve is usually a rigid calcified mass, and careful examination may make it difficult or even impossible to determine the etiology
of the underlying process. Rheumatic AS is almost always associated
with involvement of the mitral valve and with aortic regurgitation
(AR). Mediastinal radiation can also result in late scarring, fibrosis, and
calcification of the aortic leaflets.
■ BICUSPID AORTIC VALVE DISEASE
A bicuspid aortic valve (BAV) is the most common congenital heart
valve defect and occurs in 0.5–1.4% of the population with a 2–4:1
male-to-female predominance. The inheritance pattern appears to be
autosomal dominant with incomplete penetrance, although some have
questioned an X-linked component as suggested by the prevalence of
BAV disease among patients with Turner’s syndrome. The prevalence
of BAV disease among first-degree relatives of an affected individual
is ~10%. A single gene defect to explain the majority of cases has not
been identified, although mutations in the NOTCH1, GATA5, and
GATA4 genes have been described in some families. Abnormalities in
endothelial nitric oxide synthase and NKX2.5 have been implicated as
well. Medial degeneration with ascending aortic aneurysm formation
occurs commonly among patients with BAV disease; aortic coarctation
is less frequently encountered. Patients with BAV disease have larger
aortas than patients with comparable tricuspid aortic valve disease. The
aortopathy develops independently of the hemodynamic severity of the
valve lesion, but directional shear forces dictated by the anatomic configuration of the valve appear to influence its expression. For example,
enlargement of the ascending aorta along its greater curvature is most
often associated with right-left cusp fusion, the most common bicuspid
variant. Patients with BAV disease are at risk for aneurysm formation and/or dissection. A BAV can be a component of more complex
congenital heart disease with or without other left heart obstructing
lesions, as seen in Shone’s complex.
■ OTHER FORMS OF OBSTRUCTION TO LEFT
VENTRICULAR OUTFLOW
In addition to valvular AS, three other lesions may be responsible for
obstruction to LV outflow: hypertrophic obstructive cardiomyopathy
(Chap. 259), discrete fibromuscular/membranous subaortic stenosis,
All valve disease
Mitral valve disease
Aortic valve disease
0
2
4
6
8
10
12
14
<45 45–54 53–64 65–74 ≥75
Prevalence of moderate or severe valve
disease (%)
FIGURE 261-2 The burden of moderate or severe mitral and aortic valve disease in the
United States. Prevalence estimates are derived from three population-based studies
comprising a total of 11,911 individuals: The Coronary Artery Risk Development in Young
Adults (CARDIA), the Atherosclerosis Risk in Communities (ARIC), and the Cardiovascular
Health Study (CHS). (Reproduced with permission from VT Nkomo et al: Burden of valvular
heart diseases: A population-based study. Lancet 368:1005, 2006.)
TABLE 261-1 Major Causes of Aortic Stenosis
VALVE LESION ETIOLOGIES
Aortic stenosis Congenital (bicuspid, unicuspid)
Degenerative calcific disease
Rheumatic fever
Radiation
1980 PART 6 Disorders of the Cardiovascular System
and supravalvular AS (Chap. 269). The causes of LV outflow obstruction can be differentiated on the basis of the cardiac examination and
Doppler echocardiographic findings.
■ PATHOPHYSIOLOGY
The obstruction to LV outflow produces a systolic pressure gradient
between the LV and aorta. When severe obstruction is suddenly produced experimentally, the LV responds by dilation and reduction of
stroke volume. However, in some patients, the obstruction may be present at birth and/or increase gradually over the course of many years, and
LV contractile performance is maintained by the presence of concentric
LV hypertrophy. Initially, this serves as an adaptive mechanism because it
reduces toward normal the systolic stress developed by the myocardium,
as predicted by the Laplace relation (S = Pr/h, where S = systolic wall
stress, P = pressure, r = radius, and h = wall thickness). A large transaortic valve pressure gradient may exist for many years without a reduction
in cardiac output (CO) or the development of LV dilation. Ultimately,
however, excessive hypertrophy becomes maladaptive, LV systolic function declines because of afterload mismatch, abnormalities of diastolic
function progress, and irreversible myocardial fibrosis develops.
A mean systolic pressure gradient >40 mmHg with a normal CO
or an effective aortic orifice area of ~<1 cm2
(or ~<0.6 cm2
/m2
body
surface area in a normal-sized adult)—i.e., less than approximately
one-third of the normal orifice area—is generally considered to represent severe obstruction to LV outflow. The elevated LV end-diastolic
pressure observed in many patients with severe AS and preserved ejection fraction (EF) signifies the presence of diminished compliance of
the hypertrophied LV. Although the CO at rest is within normal limits
in most patients with severe AS, it usually fails to rise normally during
exercise. Loss of an appropriately timed, vigorous atrial contraction,
as occurs in atrial fibrillation (AF) or atrioventricular dissociation,
may cause rapid progression of symptoms. Late in the course, contractile function deteriorates because of afterload excess, the CO and
LV–aortic pressure gradient decline, and the mean left atrial (LA),
pulmonary artery (PA), and right ventricular (RV) pressures rise. LV
performance can be further compromised by superimposed epicardial
coronary artery disease (CAD). Stroke volume (and thus CO) can
also be reduced in patients with significant hypertrophy and a small
LV cavity despite a normal EF. Low-flow (defined as a stroke volume
index <35 mL/m2
), low-gradient (defined as a mean pressure gradient
<40 mmHg) AS (with either reduced or normal LV systolic function)
is both a diagnostic and therapeutic challenge.
The hypertrophied LV causes an increase in myocardial oxygen
requirements. In addition, even in the absence of obstructive CAD,
coronary blood flow is impaired to the extent that ischemia can be
precipitated under conditions of excess demand. Capillary density is
reduced relative to wall thickness, compressive forces are increased,
and the elevated LV end-diastolic pressure reduces the coronary driving pressure. The subendocardium is especially vulnerable to ischemia
by this mechanism.
■ SYMPTOMS
AS is rarely of clinical importance until the valve orifice has narrowed
to ~1 cm2
. Even severe AS may exist for many years without producing any symptoms because of the ability of the hypertrophied LV to
generate the elevated intraventricular pressures required to maintain a
Lipid infiltration
Radiation
Mechanical stress
Lipid-derived species
Cytokines
Inflammation Fibro-calcific response
Lipids
Calcium
hydroxyapatite
Blood
vessel
Osteoprogenitor
cell
Apoptosis
Osteogenic transition
Monocyte
Collagen
Fibrosis
Mineralization
Leukotrienes Prostaglandins
VIC
AA
LPAR
ATX
ATX
sPLA2
Ox-LDL
Ox-PL Lp-PLA2
IysoPC
IysoPA
MMPs
VEGF TNF
IL-1β
TGFβ
IL-6
WNT3a
BMP2
5-LO COX2
A2AR
NT5E
ENPP1
ATP
ALP
Pi
Adenosine
+Pi
AMP
+PPi
RUNX2
MSX2
Time
Mastocyte
T cell
Macrophage
Calcifying
microvesicles
VEGF LDL
Lp(a) LDL
NOS
uncoupling
ROS
ACE
RANKL
TNF
Chymase
Angiotensin I
Angiotensin II
inflammation
FIGURE 261-3 Pathogenesis of calcific aortic stenosis. Lipid and inflammatory cell infiltration occurs across damaged endothelium. A cascade of events follows that leads
eventually to formation of disorganized collagen (fibrosis) and calcium hydroxyapatite (bone) deposition. Valvular interstitial cells (VIC) are critical participants in this active
process. AA, arachidonic acid; ACE, angiotensin-converting enzyme; ALP, alkaline phosphatase; ApoB, apolipoprotein B; AMP, adenosine monophosphate; ATP, adenosine
triphosphate; ATX, autotaxin; A2AR, adenosine A2A receptor; BMP, bone morphogenetic protein; COX2, cyclo-oxygenase 2; ENPP, ectonucleotide pyrophosphatase/
phosphodiesterase; IL, interleukin; 5-LO, 5-lipoxygenase; LDL, low-density lipoprotein; Lp(a), lipoprotein(a); LPAR, lysophosphatidic acid receptor; Lp-PLA2, lipoproteinassociated phospholipase A2; lysoPA, lysophosphatidic acid; lysoPC, lysophosphatidylcholine; MMP, matrix metalloproteinase; NOS, nitric oxide synthase; Ox-PL, oxidized
phospholipid; Ox-LDL, oxidized LDL; RANKL, receptor activator of nuclear factor-κB ligand; ROS, reactive oxygen species; RUNX2, runt-related transcription factor 2; sPLA2,
secreted PLA2; TGFβ , transforming growth factor-β ; TNF, tumor necrosis factor; VEGF, vascular endothelial growth factor; VIC, valvular interstitial cell. (Reproduced with
permission from B Lindman et al: Calcific aortic stenosis. Nat Rev Dis Primers 2:16006, 2016.)
Aortic Stenosis
1981CHAPTER 261
normal stroke volume. Once symptoms occur, or the LV ejection fraction falls below normal, valve replacement is indicated.
Most patients with pure or predominant AS have gradually increasing obstruction over years but do not become symptomatic until the
sixth to eighth decades. Adult patients with BAV disease, however,
develop significant valve dysfunction and symptoms one to two
decades sooner. Exertional dyspnea, angina pectoris, and syncope are
the three cardinal symptoms. Often, there is a history of insidious progression of fatigue and dyspnea associated with gradual curtailment of
activities and reduced effort tolerance. Dyspnea results primarily from
elevation of the pulmonary capillary pressure caused by elevations of
LV diastolic pressures secondary to impaired relaxation and reduced
LV compliance. Angina pectoris usually develops somewhat later
and reflects an imbalance between the increased myocardial oxygen
requirements and reduced oxygen availability. CAD may or may not
be present, although its coexistence is common among AS patients age
>65. Exertional syncope may result from a decline in arterial pressure
caused by vasodilation in exercising muscles and inadequate vasoconstriction in nonexercising muscles in the face of a fixed CO, or from a
sudden fall in CO produced by an arrhythmia.
Because the CO at rest is usually well maintained until late in the
course, marked fatigability, weakness, peripheral cyanosis, cachexia,
and other clinical manifestations of a low CO are usually not prominent until this stage is reached. Orthopnea, paroxysmal nocturnal
dyspnea, and pulmonary edema, i.e., symptoms of LV failure, also
occur only in the advanced stages of the disease. Severe pulmonary
hypertension leading to RV failure and systemic venous hypertension,
hepatomegaly, AF, and tricuspid regurgitation (TR) are usually late
findings in patients with isolated severe AS.
When AS and mitral stenosis (MS) coexist, the reduction in flow
(CO) caused by MS lowers the pressure gradient across the aortic valve
and, thereby, masks many of the clinical findings produced by AS. The
transaortic pressure gradient can be increased in patients with concomitant AR due to higher aortic valve flow rates.
■ PHYSICAL FINDINGS
The heart rhythm is generally regular until late in the course; at other
times, AF should suggest the possibility of associated mitral valve disease.
Hypertension occurs commonly among older adults with AS. In the late
stages, however, when stroke volume declines, the systolic pressure may
fall and the pulse pressure narrow. The carotid arterial pulse rises slowly
to a delayed peak (pulsus parvus et tardus). A thrill or anacrotic “shudder” may be palpable over the carotid arteries, more commonly the left.
In the elderly, the stiffening of the arterial wall may mask this important
physical sign. In many patients, the a wave in the jugular venous pulse
is accentuated. This results from the diminished distensibility of the RV
cavity caused by the bulging, hypertrophied interventricular septum.
The LV impulse is sometimes displaced laterally in the later stages
of the disease. A double apical impulse (with a palpable S4
) may be
appreciated, particularly with the patient in the left lateral recumbent
position. A systolic thrill may be present at the base of the heart to the
right of the sternum when leaning forward or in the suprasternal notch.
Auscultation An early systolic ejection sound is frequently audible
in children, adolescents, and young adults with congenital BAV disease. This sound usually disappears when the valve becomes calcified
and rigid. As AS increases in severity, LV systole may become prolonged so that the aortic valve closure sound no longer precedes the
pulmonic valve closure sound, and the two components may become
synchronous, or aortic valve closure may even follow pulmonic valve
closure, causing paradoxical splitting of S2 (Chap. 239). The sound
of aortic valve closure can be heard most frequently in patients with
AS who have pliable valves, and calcification diminishes the intensity
of this sound. Frequently, an S4
is audible at the apex and reflects the
presence of LV hypertrophy and an elevated LV end-diastolic pressure;
an S3
generally occurs late in the course, when the LV dilates and its
systolic function becomes severely compromised.
The murmur of AS is described as an ejection (mid) systolic murmur
that commences shortly after the S1
, increases in intensity to reach a peak
toward the middle of ejection, and ends just before aortic valve closure. It is
characteristically low-pitched, rough, and rasping in character, and loudest
at the base of the heart, most commonly in the second right intercostal
space. It is transmitted upward along the carotid arteries. Occasionally it
is transmitted downward and to the apex, where it may be confused with
the systolic murmur of mitral regurgitation (MR) (Gallavardin effect). In
almost all patients with severe obstruction and preserved CO, the murmur
is at least grade III/VI. In patients with mild degrees of obstruction or in
those with severe stenosis with heart failure and low CO in whom the
stroke volume and, therefore, the transvalvular flow rate are reduced, the
murmur may be relatively soft and brief.
■ LABORATORY EXAMINATION
ECG In most patients with severe AS, there is LV hypertrophy. In
advanced cases, ST-segment depression and T-wave inversion (LV
“strain”) in standard leads I and aVL and in the left precordial leads are
evident. However, there is no close correlation between the ECG and the
hemodynamic severity of obstruction, and the absence of ECG signs of
LV hypertrophy does not exclude severe obstruction. Systemic hypertension can coexist and also contribute to the development of hypertrophy.
Echocardiogram The key findings on transthoracic echocardiogram are thickening, calcification, and reduced systolic opening of the
valve leaflets and LV hypertrophy. Eccentric closure of the aortic valve
cusps is characteristic of congenitally bicuspid valves. Transesophageal
echocardiography imaging can display the obstructed orifice extremely
well, but it is not routinely required for accurate characterization of AS.
The valve gradient and aortic valve area can be estimated by Doppler
measurement of the transaortic velocity. Severe AS is defined by a valve
area <1 cm2
, whereas moderate AS is defined by a valve area of 1–1.5 cm2
and mild AS by a valve area of 1.5–2 cm2
. Aortic valve sclerosis, conversely, is accompanied by a jet velocity of <2.5 m/s (peak gradient
<25 mmHg). LV dilation and reduced systolic shortening reflect
impairment of LV function. There is a robust experience with the use
of longitudinal strain to characterize earlier changes in LV systolic
function, before a decline in EF can be appreciated. Doppler indices of
impaired diastolic function are frequently seen.
Echocardiography is useful for identifying coexisting valvular
abnormalities, differentiating valvular AS from other forms of LV
outflow obstruction, and measuring the aortic root and proximal
ascending aortic dimensions. These aortic measurements are particularly important for patients with BAV disease. Dobutamine stress
echocardiography is useful for the evaluation of patients with AS and
severe LV systolic dysfunction (low-flow, low-gradient, severe AS with
reduced EF), in whom the severity of the AS can often be difficult to
judge. Patients with severe AS (i.e., valve area <1 cm2
) with a relatively
low mean gradient (<40 mmHg) despite a normal EF (low-flow, lowgradient, severe AS with normal EF) are often hypertensive, and efforts
to control their systemic blood pressure should be optimized before
Doppler echocardiography is repeated. The use of dobutamine stress
echocardiography in this setting is generally not advised. When there
is continued uncertainty regarding the severity of AS in patients with
reduced CO, quantitative analysis of the amount of aortic valve calcium
with chest computed tomography (CT) can be helpful. There is increasing use of chest CT angiography to assess aortic valve morphology
and function. It has become the imaging method of choice to plan for
transcatheter aortic valve implantation (TAVI). Finally, the use of cardiac magnetic resonance (CMR) imaging to screen for the presence of
myocardial fibrosis with late gadolinium enhancement in patients with
severe AS is an area of active investigation.
Chest X-Ray The chest x-ray may show no or little overall cardiac
enlargement for many years. Hypertrophy without dilation may produce some rounding of the cardiac apex in the frontal projection and
slight backward displacement in the lateral view. A dilated proximal
ascending aorta may be seen along the upper right heart border in the
frontal view. Aortic valve calcification may be discernible in the lateral
view, but it is usually readily apparent on fluoroscopic examination
or by echocardiography; the absence of valvular calcification on fluoroscopy in an adult suggests that severe valvular AS is not present.
In later stages of the disease, as the LV dilates, there is increasing
1982 PART 6 Disorders of the Cardiovascular System
roentgenographic evidence of LV enlargement, pulmonary congestion,
and enlargement of the LA, PA, and right-sided heart chambers.
Catheterization Right- and left-sided heart catheterization for
invasive assessment of AS is performed infrequently but can be useful
when there is a discrepancy between the clinical and noninvasive findings. Concern has been raised that attempts to cross the aortic valve
for measurement of LV pressures are associated with a risk of cerebral
embolization. Catheterization can also be useful in three distinct categories of patients: (1) patients with multivalvular disease, in whom
the role played by each valvular deformity should be defined to aid in
the planning of operative treatment; (2) young, asymptomatic patients
with noncalcific congenital AS, to define the severity of obstruction
to LV outflow, because operation or percutaneous aortic balloon valvuloplasty (PABV) may be indicated in these patients if severe AS is
present, even in the absence of symptoms; and (3) patients in whom it
is suspected that the obstruction to LV outflow may not be at the level of
the aortic valve but rather at the sub- or supravalvular level.
Coronary angiography is indicated to screen for CAD in appropriate
patients with severe AS who are being considered for surgical or transcatheter valve intervention. Angiography can be performed invasively
at the time of catheterization for hemodynamic assessment or with
noninvasive CT techniques. Decision-making regarding the need for
coronary artery revascularization at the time of aortic valve intervention is individualized.
■ NATURAL HISTORY
Death in patients with severe AS occurs most commonly in the seventh
and eighth decades. Based on data obtained at postmortem examination
in patients before surgical treatment became widely available, the average time to death after the onset of various symptoms was as follows:
angina pectoris, 3 years; syncope, 3 years; dyspnea, 2 years; heart failure,
1.5–2 years. Moreover, in >80% of patients who died with AS, symptoms
had existed for <4 years. Among adults dying with valvular AS, sudden
death, which presumably resulted from an arrhythmia, occurred in
10–20%; however, most sudden deaths occurred in patients who had
previously been symptomatic. Sudden death as the first manifestation
of severe AS is very uncommon (~1% per year) in asymptomatic adult
patients. Calcific AS is a progressive disease, with an annual reduction
in valve area averaging 0.1 cm2
and annual increases in peak jet velocity
and mean valve gradient averaging 0.3 m/s and 7 mmHg, respectively.
TREATMENT
Aortic Stenosis (Fig. 261-4)
MEDICAL TREATMENT
In patients with severe AS (valve area <1 cm2
), strenuous physical
activity and competitive sports should be avoided, even in the
asymptomatic stage. Care must be taken to avoid dehydration and
hypovolemia to protect against a significant reduction in CO. Medications used for the treatment of hypertension or CAD, including
beta blockers and angiotensin-converting enzyme (ACE) inhibitors,
are generally safe for asymptomatic patients with preserved LV systolic function. Nitroglycerin is helpful in relieving angina pectoris
in patients with CAD. Neither HMG-CoA reductase inhibitors
(“statins”) nor inhibitors of the renin-angiotensin-aldosterone system slow the rate of progression of AS. The use of statin medications
should be driven by considerations regarding primary and secondary prevention of atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease (ASCVD)
events. The need for endocarditis prophylaxis is restricted to AS
patients with a prior history of endocarditis.
SURGICAL TREATMENT
Asymptomatic patients with calcific AS and severe obstruction
should be followed carefully for the development of symptoms
and by serial echocardiograms for evidence of deteriorating LV
function. Operation is indicated in patients with severe AS (valve
area <1 cm2
or 0.6 cm2
/m2
body surface area) who are symptomatic,
those who exhibit LV systolic dysfunction (EF <50%), and those
with AS due to BAV disease and an aneurysmal root or ascending
aorta (maximal dimension >5.5 cm). Operation for aneurysm
disease is recommended at smaller aortic diameters (4.5–5.0 cm)
for patients with a family history of an aortic catastrophe and
for patients who exhibit rapid aneurysm growth (>0.5 cm/year).
Patients with asymptomatic moderate or severe AS who are referred
for coronary artery bypass grafting surgery should also have AVR.
In patients without heart failure, the operative risk of surgical AVR
(SAVR) (including patients with AS or AR) is ~2% (Table 261-2)
but increases as a function of age and the need for concomitant
aortic or other heart valve surgery or coronary bypass grafting. The
indications for SAVR in the asymptomatic patient have been the
subject of intense debate, as surgical outcomes in selected patients
have continued to improve. Relative indications for which surgery
can be considered include an abnormal response to treadmill
exercise; rapid progression of AS, especially when urgent access to
medical care might be compromised; very severe AS, defined by an
aortic valve jet velocity >5 m/s or mean gradient >60 mmHg and
low operative risk; and excessive LV hypertrophy in the absence of
systemic hypertension. Exercise testing can be safely performed in
asymptomatic patients, as many as one-third of whom will show
signs of functional impairment. In a small randomized controlled
trial (RCT) of early surgery versus conservative care for asymptomatic patients with very severe AS (defined by a transaortic valve jet
velocity ≥4.5 m/s, mean gradient ≥50 mmHg, or aortic valve area
≤0.75 cm2
), the rate of operative death or death from cardiovascular causes during follow-up was reduced with early surgery. In the
conservative care group, the cumulative incidence of sudden death
was 4% at 4 years and 14% at 8 years.
Operation should be carried out promptly (1–3 months) after
symptom onset. Clinical decision-making is straightforward for
patients with normal flow (>35 mL/m2
), high gradient (≥40 mmHg)
severe AS. In patients with low-flow, low-gradient severe AS with
reduced LVEF, perioperative mortality rates are high (15–20%), and
evidence of LV dysfunction usually persists even after a technically
successful operation. Long-term postoperative survival correlates
with preoperative LV function. Nonetheless, in view of the even
worse prognosis of such patients when they are treated medically,
there is usually little choice but to advise valve replacement, especially in patients in whom flow reserve can be demonstrated by
dobutamine stress echocardiography (defined by a ≥20% increase
in stroke volume after dobutamine challenge). Patients in this high
surgical risk group are usually treated with TAVI (see below), but
robust data from RCTs in this subpopulation of severe AS patients
are lacking. The management of patients with low-flow, low-gradient severe AS with normal LVEF is also challenging. Outcomes are
improved with surgery or TAVI compared with conservative medical care for symptomatic patients with this type of “paradoxical”
low-flow AS, but more research is needed to guide therapeutic decision making for individual patients. In patients in whom severe AS
and CAD coexist, relief of the AS and revascularization may sometimes result in striking clinical and hemodynamic improvement.
Because many patients with calcific AS are elderly, particular
attention must be directed to the adequacy of hepatic, renal, and
pulmonary function before AVR is recommended. Age alone is not
a contraindication to SAVR for AS. The perioperative mortality
rate depends to a substantial extent on the patient’s preoperative
clinical and hemodynamic state. Assessment of frailty is a critical
component of preprocedural evaluation. Treatment decisions for
AS patients who are not at low operative risk are made by a multidisciplinary heart team with representation from general cardiology, interventional cardiology, multimodality imaging, cardiac
surgery, and other subspecialties as needed, including geriatrics.
The 10-year survival rate of older adult patients with SAVR is ~60%.
Recommendations regarding the type of valve prosthesis (biological
or mechanical) must weigh the trade-offs between limited bioprosthetic valve durability and the risks of thromboembolism and bleeding with a mechanical valve and are heavily influenced by patient
age and preferences. Bioprostheses are generally favored for patients
Aortic Stenosis
1983CHAPTER 261
Abnormal aortic valve with
reduced systolic opening
Symptoms due to AS
Severe AS stage D1
• Vmax ≥4 m/s or
• ∆Pmean ≥40 mm Hg
AS stage B
(Vmax 3–3.9 m/s)
AS stage C
(Vmax ≥4 m/s)
Severe AS stage D2
DSE Vmax ≥4 m/s at
any flow rate
Severe AS stage D3
AVA1 ≤0.6 cm2/m2
and SVI <35 mL/m2
AS most likely
cause of symptoms
Rapid disease
progression
Low surgical
risk
or
or
↓ EF to <60%
on 3
serial studies
BNP >3x
normal
Vmax ≥5 m/s
Vmax ≥4 m/s and
AVA ≤1.0 cm2
LV EF <50%
Yes No EF
<50%
Other
cardiac
surgery
Other
cardiac
surgery
ETT with
↓BP or
↓ex. capacity
No AS symptoms
AVR (SAVR or TAVI) (1) AVR (SAVR or TAVI) (1) SAVR (2a) SAVR (2b)
FIGURE 261-4 Management strategy for patients with aortic stenosis. Preoperative coronary angiography should be performed routinely as determined by age, symptoms,
and coronary risk factors. Cardiac catheterization and angiography may also be helpful when there is a discrepancy between clinical and noninvasive findings. Patients who
do not meet criteria for intervention should be monitored with clinical and echocardiographic follow-up. The class designations refer to the American Heart Association/
American College of Cardiology methodology for treatment recommendations. Class I recommendations should be performed or are indicated; Class IIa recommendations
are considered reasonable to perform; Class IIb recommendations may be considered. The stages refer to the stages of progression of the disease. At disease stage A, risk
factors are present for the development of valve dysfunction; stage B refers to progressive, mild-moderate, asymptomatic valve disease; stage C disease is severe in nature
but clinically asymptomatic; stage C1 characterizes asymptomatic patients with severe valve disease but compensated ventricular function; stage C2 refers to asymptomatic,
severe disease with ventricular decompensation; stage D refers to severe, symptomatic valve disease. With aortic stenosis, stage D1 refers to symptomatic patients with
severe aortic stenosis and a high valve gradient (>40 mmHg mean gradient); stage D2 comprises patients with symptomatic, severe, low-flow, low-gradient aortic stenosis
and low left ventricular ejection fraction (LVEF); and stage D3 characterizes patients with symptomatic, severe, low-flow, low-gradient aortic stenosis and preserved left
ventricular ejection fraction (paradoxical, low-flow, low-gradient severe aortic stenosis). Patients with symptomatic severe AS (left side of the diagram, jet velocity ≥4m/s)
should be referred for AVR (SAVR or TAVI). Asymptomatic patients with severe AS (jet velocity ≥4m/s) should be referred for AVR (SAVR or TAVI) for LVEF <50% or when
other cardiac surgery is needed (e.g., aneurysm repair). There are several findings for which referral for AVR would be reasonable related to results of exercise testing, the
presence of a jet velocity >5 m/s or elevated B-type natriuretic peptide (BNP), provided the patient is considered low risk for complications related to AVR. AS, aortic stenosis;
AVA, aortic valve area; AVR, aortic valve replacement; BP, blood pressure; DSE, dobutamine stress echocardiography; EF, ejection fraction; ETT, exercise treadmill test; ΔPmean,
mean pressure gradient; SAVR, surgical AVR; TAVI, transcatheter aortic valve implantation; Vmax, maximum velocity. (Reproduced with permission from CM Otto et al:
2020 AHA/ACC Guideline for management of patients with valvular heart disease: A report of the American College of Cardiology/American Heart Association Task Force
on Practice Guidelines. Circulation 143:e72, 2021.)
TABLE 261-2 Mortality Rates After Aortic Valve Surgerya
OPERATION NUMBER
UNADJUSTED OPERATIVE
MORTALITY (%)
AVR (isolated) 25,274 1.9
AVR + CAB 15,855 3.6
a
Data are for calendar year 2018 during which 1088 participant groups reported a
total of 287,872 procedures.
Abbreviations: AVR, aortic valve replacement; CAB, coronary artery bypass.
Source: Adapted from ME Bowdish et al: Ann Thorac Surg 109:1646, 2020.
age >65 years. Shared decision-making with younger patients must
be individualized, although increasing numbers of patients age <65
now opt for a biological valve replacement. Approximately 30%
of bioprosthetic valves evidence primary valve failure by 10 years,
requiring re-replacement (or valve-in-valve TAVI, see below), and
an approximately equal percentage of patients with mechanical
prostheses develop hemorrhagic complications as a consequence
of treatment with vitamin K antagonists. In a large observational
study of patients who underwent SAVR in California between 1996
and 2013, receipt of a biological versus a mechanical prosthesis in
patients <55 years old was associated with an excess hazard of death
over 15 years of follow-up. Homograft AVR is usually reserved for
patients with aortic valve endocarditis.
The Ross procedure involves replacement of the diseased aortic
valve with the autologous pulmonic valve and implantation of a
homograft in the native pulmonic position. It is a technically complex procedure that may be considered in young or middle-aged
adult patients when surgical and institutional expertise are available. Late postoperative complications include aortic root dilation,
AR, and pulmonary homograft stenosis.
1984 PART 6 Disorders of the Cardiovascular System
PERCUTANEOUS AORTIC BALLOON VALVULOPLASTY
This procedure is preferable to operation in many children and
young adults with congenital, noncalcific AS (Chap. 269). It is not
recommended as definitive therapy in adults with severe calcific AS
because of a very high restenosis rate (80% within 1 year) and the
risk of procedural complications, but on occasion, it has been used
successfully as a bridge to operation or TAVI in patients with severe
LV dysfunction and shock. It is performed routinely as part of the
TAVI procedure (see below).
TRANSCATHETER AORTIC VALVE IMPLANTATION
TAVI surpassed SAVR for treatment of AS in the United States in 2016
and is now available to symptomatic patients across the entire surgical
risk spectrum (prohibitive, high, intermediate, and low) on the basis of
the favorable results seen in a series of landmark RCTs reported over
the past decade (Fig. 261-5). Application of TAVI in asymptomatic AS
patients is under active investigation. It is most commonly performed
using one of two systems, a balloon-expandable valve or a selfexpanding valve, both of which incorporate a pericardial bioprosthesis
(Fig. 261-6). TAVI is most frequently undertaken via the transfemoral
route, although trans-LV apical, subclavian, carotid, and ascending
aortic routes have been used. Aortic balloon valvuloplasty under rapid
RV (or LV) pacing is performed as a first step to create an orifice of
sufficient size for the prosthesis. Procedural success rates exceed 95%
in appropriately selected patients. Valve performance characteristics
are excellent over 5 years; longer-term durability assessment is ongoing.
Outcomes achieved with this transformative technology have been
very favorable and have allowed the extension of AVR to groups of
patients previously considered at high or prohibitive risk for conventional surgery. Nevertheless, some prohibitive or high surgical risk
patients are not candidates for this procedure because their comorbidity profile and frailty would make its undertaking inappropriate. The
heart team is specifically charged with making challenging decisions
of this nature. The use of these devices for treatment of patients with
structural deterioration of bioprosthetic aortic valves (valve-in-valve
TAVI), as an alternative to reoperative valve replacement, has increased
sharply over the past 5 years. The technology has also been increasingly
applied to BAV patients despite the fact that patients with this anatomy
were excluded from the landmark RCTs.
Compared with SAVR, transfemoral TAVI results in fewer periprocedural deaths and confers lower risks of strokes, major bleeding, and
AF. Hospital lengths of stay are shorter and return to normal activity
more rapid with TAVI. Rates of permanent pacemaker use, perivalvular AR, and vascular complications are lower with SAVR. The
choice between TAVI and SAVR for patients with trileaflet AS who
prefer a biological prosthesis rests on several clinical, imaging, and
technical considerations (Fig. 261-7 and Table 261-3). Because there
100
90
50
60
70
80
40
30
Death, stroke, or rehospitalization (%)
20
10
0
0 3 6
Months since procedure
No. at risk
A
Surgery
TAVR
454
496
408
475
390
467
381
462
377
456
374
451
9 12
20
15
10
5
0
3
4.2
8.5
Hazard ratio, 0.54 (95% CI, 0.37–0.79)
P = 0.001 by log-rank test
15.1
9.3
TAVR
Surgery
0 6 9 12
FIGURE 261-6 Transcatheter aortic valve replacement (TAVR) with a balloon
expandable valve versus surgical aortic valve replacement in low surgical risk
patients. Shown are Kaplan-Meier estimates of the rate of the primary composite
end point including death from any cause, stroke, or rehospitalization. In this
randomized trial, transfemoral TAVR resulted in a marked reduction in the composite
endpoint at 1 year, although the individual components did not differ significantly.
(From MJ Mack et al: Transcatheter aortic-valve replacement with a balloonexpandable valve in low-risk patients. N Engl J Med 380:1695, 2019. Copyright © 2019
Massachusetts Medical Society. Reprinted with permission from Massachusetts
Medical Society.)
FIGURE 261-5 Balloon-expandable (A) and self-expanding (B) valves for transcatheter aortic valve replacement (TAVR). B, inflated balloon; N, nose cone; V, valve. (Part A,
courtesy of Edwards Lifesciences, Irvine, CA; with permission. NovaFlex+ is a trademark of Edwards Lifesciences Corporation. Part B, © Medtronic, Inc. 2015. Medtronic
CoreValve Transcatheter Aortic Valve. CoreValve is a registered trademark of Medtronic, Inc.)
B
V
N
A B
Aortic Stenosis
1985CHAPTER 261
Adult patient with AS
Indication for AVR
Share decision making with
patient and heart valve
team with discussion of
SAVR and TAVI (1)
Risk assessment
Patient age*
Mechanical
AVR (2a)
Pulmonic
autograft3
(2a)
Mechanical or
bioprosthetic (2a)
Bioprosthetic
(2a)
Bioprosthetic
No
No No
YES No
YES No
Age/Life expectancy*
Age <65 yrs
SAVR (1) SAVR (1)
TF TAVI (1)
TF TAVI (1)
SAVR (2a)
TAVI (1) Palliative care
(1)
Age 65-80 Age >80 yrs
Symptomatic severe AS (D1,
D2, D3) or asymptomatic
severe AS with EF <50%
Valve and vascular anatomy
and other factors suitable
for transfemoral TAVI†
Valve and vascular
anatomy suitable for
transfemoral TAVI†
Bioprosthetic
(1)
SAVR
VKA OK
>65 yrs No VKA
Life expectancy with acceptable
QOL >1 yr, patient preferences
and values
Estimated risk not extremely
high or prohibitive
VKA Anticoagulation
• Contraindicated
• Cannot be managed
• Not desired
High or prohibitive surgical risk
• STS >8% or
• >2 frailty measures or
• >2 organ systems or
• Procedure specific impediment
<50 yrs 50–65 yrs
FIGURE 261-7 Choice of surgical aortic valve replacement (SAVR) versus transfemoral transcatheter aortic valve implantation (TAVI) when indications for aortic valve
replacement are met. For patients who are not prohibitive or high surgical risk candidates, TAVI is not recommended for patients age <65 years (left hand side of flow
diagram). For prohibitive or high surgical risk patients, TAVI is preferred over SAVR but is recommended on an individual basis only after multidisciplinary heart team
consensus decision-making in collaboration with the patient and family. Palliative care is recommended when TAVI is considered futile (right side of flow diagram). AS, aortic
stenosis; AVR, aortic valve replacement; EF, ejection fraction; QOL, quality of life; STS, Society of Thoracic Surgeons; VKA, vitamin K antagonist. *
Approximate ages, based
on US Actuarial Life Expectancy tables, are provided for guidance. The balance between expected patient longevity and valve durability varies continuously across the age
range, with more durable valves preferred for patients with a longer life expectancy. Bioprosthetic valve durability is finite (with shorter durability for younger patients),
whereas mechanical valves are very durable but require lifelong anticoagulation. Long-term (20-y) data on outcomes with surgical bioprosthetic valves are available; robust
data on transcatheter bioprosthetic valves extend to only 5 years, leading to uncertainty about longer-term outcomes. The decision about valve type should be individualized
on the basis of patient-specific factors that might affect longevity. †
Placement of a transcatheter valve requires vascular anatomy that allows transfemoral delivery and the
absence of aortic root dilation that would require surgical replacement. Valvular anatomy must be suitable for placement on the specific prosthetic valve, including annulus
size and shape, leaflet number and calcification, and ostial height. (Reproduced with permission from CM Otto et al: 2020 AHA/ACC Guideline for management of patients
with valvular heart disease: A report of the American College of Cardiology/American Heart Association Task Force on Practice Guidelines. Circulation 143:e72, 2021.)
are scant RCT data on TAVI outcomes in patients <65 years, SAVR is
recommended in this age group. Aortic valve/root anatomy, as well
as the extent, severity, and distribution of calcium, and the distance
of the coronary arteries from the plane of the annulus, may dictate
a surgical approach, as could the need to perform a concomitant
procedure such as ascending aortic replacement. Lastly, inability
to achieve transfemoral access is a relative impediment to TAVI
given the higher complication rates observed when this procedure is
undertaken from other vascular access sites.
1986 PART 6 Disorders of the Cardiovascular System
TABLE 261-3 Factors Favoring SAVR, TAVI, or Palliative Care in Patients with Aortic Stenosis
FAVORS SAVR FAVORS TAVI FAVORS PALLIATION
Age/life expectancya • Younger age/longer life expectancy • Older age/fewer expected remaining
years of life
• Limited life expectancy
Valve anatomy • Bicuspid aortic valve
• Subaortic (LVOT) calcification
• Rheumatic valve disease
• Small or large aortic annulusb
• Calcific trileaflet AS
Prosthetic valve
preference
• Mechanical or surgical bioprosthetic valve
preferred
• Concern for patient-prosthesis mismatch (annular
enlargement might be considered)
• Bioprosthetic valve preferred
• Favorable ratio of life expectancy to
valve durability
• TAVI provides larger valve area than
same-sized SAVR
Concurrent cardiac
conditions
• Aortic dilationc
• Severe primary MR
• Severe CAD requiring bypass grafting
• Septal hypertrophy requiring myectomy
• Atrial fibrillation
• Severe calcification of the ascending
aorta (“porcelain” aorta)
• Irreversible severe LV systolic
dysfunction
• Severe MR due to annular
calcification
Noncardiac conditions • Severe lung, liver, or renal disease
• Mobility issues (high risk for
sternotomy)
• Symptoms likely due to noncardiac
conditions
• Severe dementia
• Moderate to severe involvement of 2
or more other organ systems
Frailty • Not frail or few frailty measures • Frailty likely to improve after TAVI • Severe frailty unlikely to improve
after TAVI
Estimated risk of SAVR
or TAVI
• SAVR risk low
• TAVI risk high
• TAVI risk low to medium
• SAVR risk high to prohibitive
• Prohibitive SAVR risk (>15%) or postTAVI life expectancy <1 year
Procedure-specific
impediments
• Valve anatomy, annular size, or low coronary ostial
height precludes TAVI
• Vascular access does not allow transfemoral TAVI
• Previous cardiac surgery with at-risk
coronary grafts
• Previous chest irradiation
• Valve anatomy, annular size, or
coronary ostial height precludes TAVI
• Vascular access does not allow
transfemoral TAVI
Goals of care and patient
preferences and values
• Less uncertainty about valve durability
• Avoid repeat intervention
• Lower risk of permanent pacer
• Life prolongation
• Symptom relief
• Improved long-term exercise capacity and QOL
• Avoid vascular complications
• Accepts longer hospital stay, pain in recovery
period
• Accepts uncertainty about valve
durability and possible repeat
intervention
• Higher risk of permanent pacer
• Life prolongation
• Symptom relief
• Improved exercise capacity and QOL
• Prefers shorter hospital stay, less
postprocedure pain
• Life prolongation not an important
goal
• Avoid futile or unnecessary
diagnostic or therapeutic procedures
• Avoid procedural stroke risk
• Avoid possibility of cardiac pacer
a
Data on bioprosthetic valve durability are more robust for SAVR valves than for TAVI valves. Mechanical valves are very durable but require lifelong anticoagulation.
Choice of prosthesis is a shared decision-making process accounting for individual patient values and preferences. b
Surgical root enlargement can be performed at time of
SAVR to allow a use of a larger prosthesis and reduce the occurrence of prosthesis-patient mismatch. c
Aortic root or ascending aortic enlargement may require surgical
correction at time of SAVR.
Abbreviations: AS, aortic stenosis; CAD, coronary artery disease; LV, left ventricular; LVOT, left ventricular outflow tract; MR, mitral regurgitation; QOL, quality of life;
SAVR, surgical aortic valve replacement; TAVI, transcatheter aortic valve implantation.
Source: Reproduced with permission from CR Burke et al: Goals of care in patients with severe aortic stenosis. Eur Heart J 41:929, 2020.
■ ETIOLOGY
(Table 262-1) Aortic regurgitation (AR) may be caused by primary
valve disease, aortic root disease, or their combination.
Primary Valve Disease Rheumatic disease results in thickening, deformity, and shortening of the individual aortic valve cusps,
changes that prevent their proper opening during systole and closure
during diastole. A rheumatic origin is much less common in patients
with isolated AR who do not have associated rheumatic mitral valve
disease. Patients with congenital bicuspid aortic valve (BAV) disease
may develop predominant AR, and ~20% of these patients will require
aortic valve surgery between 10 and 40 years of age. Congenital
262 Aortic Regurgitation
Patrick T. O’Gara, Joseph Loscalzo
■ FURTHER READING
Carapetis JR et al: Acute rheumatic fever and rheumatic heart disease.
Nat Rev Dis Primers 2:15084, 2016.
Kang D-H et al: Early surgery or conservative care for asymptomatic
aortic stenosis. N Engl J Med 382:111, 2020.
Lindman B et al: Calcific aortic stenosis. Nat Rev Dis Primers 2:16006, 2016.
Otto CM et al: 2020 AHA/ACC Guideline for management of patients
with valvular heart disease: A report of the American College of Cardiology/American Heart Association Task Force on Practice Guidelines. Circulation 143:e72, 2021.
Siontis GCM et al: Transcatheter aortic valve implantation versus surgical aortic valve replacement for treatment of symptomatic severe aortic
stenosis: an updated meta-analysis. Eur Heart J 40:3143, 2019.
Watkins DA et al: Global, regional, and national burden of rheumatic
heart disease, 1990-2015. N Engl J Med 377:713, 2017.
Zühlke L et al: Clinical outcomes in 3343 children and adults with
rheumatic heart disease from 14 low- and middle-income countries:
Two-year follow-up of the global Rheumatic Heart Disease Registry
(the REMEDY Study). Circulation 134:1456, 2016.
Aortic Regurgitation
1987CHAPTER 262
regurgitates back into the LV) is increased in patients with AR. In
patients with severe AR, the volume of regurgitant flow may equal the
effective forward stroke volume. In contrast to MR, in which a portion
of the LV stroke volume is delivered into the low-pressure left atrium
(LA), in AR, the entire LV stroke volume is ejected into a high-pressure
zone, the aorta. An increase in the LV end-diastolic volume (increased
preload) constitutes the major hemodynamic compensation for AR.
The dilation and eccentric hypertrophy of the LV allow this chamber
to eject a larger stroke volume without requiring any increase in the
relative shortening of each myofibril. Therefore, severe AR may occur
with a normal effective forward stroke volume and a normal LV ejection fraction (LVEF, total [forward plus regurgitant] stroke volume/
end-diastolic volume), together with an elevated LV end-diastolic
pressure and volume. However, through the operation of Laplace’s law,
LV dilation increases the LV systolic tension required to develop any
given level of systolic pressure. Chronic AR is, thus, a state in which
LV preload and afterload are both increased. Ultimately, these adaptive
measures fail. As LV function deteriorates, the end-diastolic volume
rises further and the forward stroke volume and ejection fraction (EF)
decline. Deterioration of LV function often precedes the development
of symptoms. Considerable thickening of the LV wall also occurs with
chronic AR, and at autopsy, the hearts of these patients may be among
the largest encountered, sometimes weighing >1000 g.
The reverse diastolic pressure gradient from aorta to LV, which
drives the AR flow, falls progressively during diastole, accounting for
the typical decrescendo nature of the diastolic murmur. Equilibration
between aortic and LV pressures may occur toward the end of diastole
in patients with chronic severe AR, particularly when the heart rate is
slow. In patients with acute severe AR, the LV is unprepared for the
regurgitant volume load. LV compliance is normal or reduced, and LV
diastolic pressures rise rapidly, occasionally to levels >40 mmHg. The
LV pressure may exceed the LA pressure toward the end of diastole,
and this reversed pressure gradient closes the mitral valve prematurely.
In patients with chronic severe AR, the effective forward cardiac
output (CO) usually is normal or only slightly reduced at rest, but often
it fails to rise normally during exercise. An early sign of LV dysfunction
is a reduction in the EF. In advanced stages, there may be considerable
elevation of the LA, pulmonary artery (PA) wedge, PA, and right ventricular (RV) pressures and lowering of the forward CO at rest.
Myocardial ischemia may occur in patients with AR because myocardial oxygen requirements are elevated by LV dilation, hypertrophy, and
elevated LV systolic tension, and coronary blood flow may be compromised. A large fraction of coronary blood flow occurs during diastole,
when aortic pressure is low, thereby reducing coronary perfusion or driving pressure. This combination of increased oxygen demand and reduced
supply may cause myocardial ischemia, particularly of the subendocardium, even in the absence of epicardial coronary artery disease (CAD).
■ HISTORY
Approximately three-fourths of patients with pure or predominant valvular AR are men; women predominate among patients with primary
valvular AR who have associated rheumatic mitral valve disease. A history compatible with IE may sometimes be elicited from patients with
rheumatic or congenital involvement of the aortic valve, and the infection often precipitates or seriously aggravates preexisting symptoms.
In patients with acute severe AR, as may occur in IE, aortic dissection, or trauma, the LV cannot dilate sufficiently to maintain stroke
volume, and LV diastolic pressure rises rapidly with associated marked
elevations of LA and PA wedge pressures. Pulmonary edema and/or
cardiogenic shock may develop rapidly.
Chronic severe AR may have a long latent period, and patients may
remain relatively asymptomatic for as long as 10–15 years. Uncomfortable awareness of the heartbeat, especially on lying down, may be an
early complaint. Sinus tachycardia, during exertion or with emotion, or
premature ventricular contractions may produce particularly uncomfortable palpitations as well as head pounding. These complaints may
persist for many years before the development of exertional dyspnea,
usually the first symptom of diminished cardiac reserve. The dyspnea
is followed by orthopnea, paroxysmal nocturnal dyspnea, and excessive
TABLE 262-1 Major Causes of Aortic Regurgitation
VALVE LESION ETIOLOGIES
Aortic regurgitation Valvular
Congenital (bicuspid)
Endocarditis
Rheumatic fever
Myxomatous (prolapse)
Radiation
Trauma
Syphilis
Ankylosing spondylitis
Aortic root disease
Aortic dissection
Medial degeneration
Marfan syndrome
Bicuspid aortic valve
Nonsyndromic familial aneurysm
Aortitis
Hypertension
fenestrations of the aortic valve occasionally produce mild AR. Membranous subaortic stenosis results in a high velocity systolic jet that
often leads to thickening and scarring of the aortic valve leaflets and
secondary AR. Prolapse of an aortic cusp, resulting in progressive
chronic AR, occurs in ~15% of patients with ventricular septal defect
(Chap. 269), but may also occur as an isolated phenomenon or as a
consequence of myxomatous degeneration sometimes associated with
mitral and/or tricuspid valve involvement.
AR may result from infective endocarditis (IE), which can develop
on a valve previously affected by rheumatic disease, a congenitally
deformed valve, or on a normal aortic valve, and may lead to perforation or erosion of one or more leaflets. The aortic valve leaflets
may become scarred and retracted during the course of syphilis or
ankylosing spondylitis and contribute further to the AR that derives
primarily from the associated root dilation. Although traumatic rupture or avulsion of an aortic cusp is an uncommon cause of acute AR,
it represents the most frequent serious lesion in patients surviving
nonpenetrating cardiac injuries. The coexistence of hemodynamically
significant aortic stenosis (AS) with AR usually excludes all the rarer
forms of AR because it occurs almost exclusively in patients with rheumatic or congenital AR. In patients with AR due to primary valvular
disease, dilation of the aortic annulus may occur secondarily and lead
to worsening regurgitation.
Primary Aortic Root Disease AR also may be due entirely to
marked aortic annular dilation, i.e., aortic root disease, without primary involvement of the valve leaflets; widening of the aortic annulus
and lack of diastolic coaptation of the aortic leaflets are responsible
for the AR (Chap. 280). Medial degeneration of the ascending aorta,
which may or may not be associated with other manifestations of Marfan syndrome; idiopathic dilation of the aorta; annuloaortic ectasia;
osteogenesis imperfecta; and severe, chronic hypertension may all
widen the aortic annulus and lead to progressive AR. Occasionally
AR is caused by retrograde dissection of the aorta involving the aortic
annulus. Syphilis and ankylosing spondylitis, both of which may also
affect the aortic leaflets, may be associated with cellular infiltration and
scarring of the media of the thoracic aorta, leading to aortic dilation,
aneurysm formation, and severe regurgitation. In syphilis of the aorta
(Chap. 182), now a very rare condition, the involvement of the intima
may narrow the coronary ostia, which in turn may be responsible for
myocardial ischemia. Takayasu’s aortitis and giant cell aortitis can also
result in aneurysm formation and secondary AR.
■ PATHOPHYSIOLOGY
The total stroke volume ejected by the left ventricle (LV) (i.e., the sum
of the effective forward stroke volume and the volume of blood that
No comments:
Post a Comment
اكتب تعليق حول الموضوع