Blood is pumped through your heart in only one direction. Heart valves play a key role in this one-way blood flow, opening and closing with each heartbeat. Pressure changes on either side of the valves cause them to open their flap-like "doors" (called cusps or leaflets) at just the right time, then close tightly to prevent a backflow of blood.
There are 4 valves in the heart: tricuspid, pulmonary, mitral, and aortic.
Diastole: blood is pumped from the atria into the ventricles. |
Systole: Blood is pumped out of the ventricles to the lungs and the body. |
In the United States, surgeons perform about 106,000 heart valve operations each year. Nearly all of these operations are done to repair or replace the mitral or aortic valves. These valves are on the left side of the heart, which works harder than the right. They control the flow of oxygen-rich blood from the lungs to the rest of the body.
See also on this site: Valve Disease
If valve damage is mild, doctors may be able to treat it with medicines. If damage to the valve is severe, surgery to repair or replace the valve may be needed.
What is valve repair?
Valve repair can usually be done on congenital valve defects (defects you are born with) and has a good success record with treating mitral valve defects.
Here are some procedures surgeons may use to repair a valve:
- Commissurotomy is used for narrowed valves, where the leaflets are thickened and perhaps stuck together. The surgeon opens the valve by cutting the points where the leaflets meet.
- Valvuloplasty strengthens the leaflets to provide more support and to let the valve close tightly. This support comes from a ring-like device that surgeons attach around the outside of the valve opening.
- Reshaping is done when the surgeon cuts out a section of a leaflet. Once the leaflet is sewn back together, the valve can close properly.
- Decalcification removes calcium buildup from the leaflets. Once the calcium is removed, the leaflets can close properly.
- Repair of structural support replaces or shortens the cords that give the valves support (these cords are called the chordae tendineae and the papillary muscles). When the cords are the right length, the valve can close properly.
- Patching covers holes or tears in the leaflets with a tissue patch.
What is valve replacement?
Severe valve damage means the valve must be replaced and most often involves the aortic or mitral valve. It is also used to treat any valve disease that is life-threatening. Some patients may need more than one valve repaired or replaced.
Two kinds of valves can be used for replacement:
- Mechanical valves are usually made from materials such as plastic, carbon, or metal. Mechanical valves are strong, and they last a long time. Because blood tends to stick to mechanical valves and create blood clots, patients with these valves will need to take blood-thinning medicines (called anticoagulants) for the rest of their lives.
- Biological valves are made from animal tissue (called a xenograft) or taken from the human tissue of a donated heart (called an allograft or homograft). Sometimes, a patient's own tissue can be used for valve replacement (called an autograft). Patients with biological valves usually do not need to take blood-thinning medicines. These valves are not as strong as mechanical valves, though, and they may need to be replaced every 10 years or so. Biological valves break down even faster in children and young adults, so these valves are used most often in elderly patients.
You and your doctor will decide which type of valve is best for you.
During valve repair or replacement surgery, the breastbone is divided, the heart is stopped, and blood is sent through a heart-lung machine. Because the heart or the aorta must be opened, heart valve surgery is open heart surgery.
What to Expect
The operation will be scheduled at a time that is best for you
and your surgeon, except in urgent cases. Be sure to tell your surgeon and
cardiologist about any changes in your health including symptoms of a cold or the flu. Any infection may affect your recovery.
Also, review all medications
(prescription as well as over-the-counter and supplements) with your
cardiologist and surgeon.
Before surgery, you may have to have
an electrocardiogram (ECG or EKG), blood
tests, urine tests, and a chest x-ray to give your surgeon the latest
information about your health.
If you smoke, your doctor will want
you to stop at least 2 weeks before your surgery. Smoking before surgery can
lead to problems with blood clotting and breathing.
The night before surgery, you will
be asked to bathe to reduce the amount of germs on your skin.
A medicine
(anesthetic) will make you sleep during the operation. This is called
"anesthesia." Because anesthesia is safest on an empty stomach, you
will be asked not to eat or drink after midnight the night before surgery. If
you do eat or drink anything after midnight, it is important that you tell your
anesthesiologist and surgeon.
You will get complete instructions from your
cardiologist and surgeon about the procedure, but here are some basics you can
expect as a valve surgery patient.
Day of Surgery
Most patients are admitted to the
hospital the day before surgery or, in some cases, on the morning of surgery.
Small metal disks called electrodes
will be attached to your chest. These electrodes are connected to an
electrocardiogram machine, which will monitor your heart's rhythm and
electrical activity. You will receive a local anesthetic to numb the area where
a plastic tube (called a line) will be inserted in an artery in your wrist. An
intravenous (IV) line will be inserted in your vein. The IV line will give you
the anesthesia during the operation. You will be given something to help you
relax (a mild tranquilizer) before you are taken into the operating room.
After you are completely asleep, a
tube will be inserted down your windpipe and connected to a machine called a
respirator, which will take over your breathing. Another tube will be inserted
through your nose and down your throat, into your stomach. This tube will stop
liquid and air from collecting in your stomach, so you will not feel sick and
bloated when you wake up. A thin tube called a catheter will be inserted into
your bladder to collect any urine produced during the operation.
A heart-lung machine is used for all valve repair or replacement surgeries. This will keep oxygen-rich blood flowing through your body while your heart is stopped. A perfusion technologist or blood-flow specialist operates the heart-lung machine. Before you are hooked up to this machine, a blood-thinning medicine called an anticoagulant will be given to prevent your blood from clotting. The surgical team is led by the cardiovascular surgeon and includes other assisting surgeons, an anesthesiologist, and surgical nurses.
After you are hooked up to the heart-lung machine, your heart is stopped and cooled. Next, a cut is made into the heart or aorta, depending on which valve is being repaired or replaced. Once the surgeon has finished the repair or replacement, the heart is then started again, and you are disconnected from the heart-lung machine.
The surgery can take anywhere from 2 to 4 hours or more, depending on the number of valves that need to be repaired or replaced.
Recovery Time
You can expect to stay in the hospital for about a week, including at least 1 to 3 days in the Intensive Care Unit (ICU).
Recovery after valve surgery may take a long time, depending on how healthy you were before the operation. You will have to rest and limit your activities. Your doctor may want you to begin an exercise program or to join a cardiac rehabilitation program.
If you have an office job, you can usually go back to work in 4 to 6 weeks. Those who have more physically demanding jobs may need to wait longer.
Life After Valve Replacement
Most valve repair and replacement operations are successful. In some rare cases, a valve repair may fail and another operation may be needed.
Patients with a biological valve may need to have the valve replaced in 10 to 15 years. Mechanical valves may also fail, so patients should alert their doctor if they are having any symptoms of valve failure.
Patients with a mechanical valve will need to take a blood-thinning medicine for the rest of their lives. Because these medicines increase the risk of bleeding within the body, you should always wear a medical alert bracelet and tell your doctor or dentist that you are taking a blood-thinning medicine.
Even if you are not taking a blood-thinning medicine, you must always tell your doctor and dentist that you have had valve surgery. If you are having a surgical or dental procedure, you should take an antibiotic before the procedure. Bacteria can enter the bloodstream during these procedures. If bacteria get into a repaired or artificial valve, it can lead to a serious condition called bacterial endocarditis. Antibiotics can prevent bacterial endocarditis.
Patients with mechanical valves say they sometimes hear a quiet clicking sound in their chest. This is just the sound of the new valve opening and closing, and it is nothing to be worried about. In fact, it is a sign that the new valve is working the way it should.
Minimally Invasive Valve Surgery
Minimally invasive heart valve surgery is a technique that uses smaller incisions to repair or replace heart valves. This means there is less pain. Minimally invasive surgery also reduces the length of the hospital stay and the recovery time.
Minimally invasive valve surgery can only be done in certain patients. This type of surgery cannot be done in patients
- With severe valve damage
- Who need more than one valve repaired or replaced
- Who have clogged arteries (atherosclerosis)
- Who are obese
In some cases, minimally invasive valve surgery can be done using a robot. Robotic surgery does not require a large incision in the chest. It is not available at all hospitals, and patients with severe valve damage cannot have the procedure. The Texas Heart Institute has a robot.
With robotic surgery, the surgeon has a control console, a side cart with 3 robotic arms, a special vision system, and instruments. A computer translates the surgeon's natural hand and wrist movements made on the control console to instruments that have been placed inside the patient through small incisions. The robot's controls can read even the tiniest of movements the surgeon makes.
Robotic surgery can reduce the time it takes to do valve surgery, as well as shorten the hospital stay and recovery time.
Transcatheter Aortic Valve Implantation (TAVI)
Also called transcatheter aortic valve replacement (TAVR)
Transcatheter aortic valve implantation is a minimally invasive procedure to repair a damaged or diseased aortic valve. A catheter is inserted into an artery in the groin and threaded to the heart. A balloon at the end of the catheter, with a replacement valve folded around it, delivers the new valve to take the place of the old.
The tissue valve is made of bovine (cow) pericardium supported by a metal stent.
Also called TAVR (transcatheter aortic valve replacement), the FDA-approved TAVI procedure is only appropriate for select patients with severe symptomatic aortic stenosis (narrowing of the aortic valve opening) who are not candidates for traditional open chest surgery or who are high-risk operable candidates.
TAVI is performed while the heart is beating and does not usually require cardio-pulmonary bypass (use of a heart-lung machine). For the TAVI procedure, a catheter is placed in the femoral artery (in the groin), as is done for angioplasty. The catheter is guided into the heart. A compressed tissue heart valve is placed on the balloon catheter and positioned directly inside the diseased aortic valve. Once the new valve is in position, the balloon is inflated to secure the valve in place. The balloon is then deflated and the catheter withdrawn.
The procedure is performed with general anesthesia in a hybrid suite (which has both catheterization and surgical capabilities). A team of interventional cardiologists and imaging specialists, heart surgeons and cardiac anesthesiologists work together, using fluroscopy and echocardiography to guide the valve to the site of implantation/replacement.
Recovery from the procedure is generally similar to that described for surgical valve replacement.
See "TAVI gave Nancy renewed health with minimal surgery," a patient story on YouTube.
See also on this site: Valve Disease
Submit your specific question to "Ask a Heart Doctor" or search the forum for previously posted answers on your topic of choice.
See on other sites:
American
Heart Association
www.heart.org/HEARTORG/Conditions/More/HeartValveProblemsandDisease/Options-for-Heart-Valve-Replacement_UCM_450816_Article.jsp
Options for Heart Valve Replacement
Updated August 2016