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Post Procedural TAVR Complications

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Next we're gonna talk about post-procedural complications after tavr. And,

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and the biggie is this thing called halts halt stands for hypo attenuating

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leaflet thickening. And what that is,

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I think it's easiest to see on these images.

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You get thrombus that forms on the aortic side of the valve cusps

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and really just sort of fills in those cusps. Um,

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with thrombus, you can have it on one or multiple of these cupps.

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Here's a nice view in the short axis dimension,

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looking down the barrel of those cusps. Uh, and you can see that, um,

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area of hypot leaflet thickening depicted below. Um,

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what it does, um,

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what you can see really nicely on this VR imaging is it restricts the amount of

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opening that you can get from these leaflets.

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And so the patients will often get increased gradients. So, um,

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the normal low gradient across the valve,

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which is what you'd like to see for a successful valve replacement,

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then jumps up, um, because of this, um, hypot annuating leaflet thickening.

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So this halt has an unknown impact on valve durability,

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and it's actually pretty common. We're still learning a lot about it. It's a,

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a fairly new concept. Um, but the, you know,

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studies have shown that's it present in roughly 10 to 20% of patients.

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And just of noted,

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it's been found out that not only does it exist in TAVR valves,

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but also happens in surgical valves, we just never really looked for it before.

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Um,

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so we can see halt in all the different types of prosthetic valves that are put,

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uh, in patients to, to treat aortic stenosis. Um,

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usually it's associated with increased gradients. And like I said,

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patients may be symptomatic, although they don't have to be. Um,

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and thankfully though, if we see the hypot leaflet thickening, um,

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it is treatable by anticoagulation if and when detected.

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So what do we want to report for patients who have halts? Um, well, uh,

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we wanna report the degree of halt,

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and this is a figure taken from these guidelines that I've mentioned in previous

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videos from the, um, journal of Cardiovascular ct. Um,

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and this is a qualitative assessment of the percentage of the leaflet that's

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involved by that, uh, thrombus that I have mentioned, um, in the previous slide.

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And then we also wanna report the amount of restriction of the leaflet

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motion. Uh, and this is a really handy figure that comes from, uh,

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this review article from JAK Cardiovascular Imaging,

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which I would highly recommend on this topic, um,

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because it has some really great, uh, uh, figures, um,

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that help really explain what's going on. But basically, the, uh,

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restriction of the leaflet motion is how much of the leaflet motion, you know,

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is, is, um, abnormal. Um,

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and you can measure it insistently, uh,

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basically by looking at the diameter of the, the hole of the, um,

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aortic valve compared to the width of the,

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of amount of restriction that you see here. Um, you divide by two, right?

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You basically just take the radius, so it's the percent of restriction, uh,

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of that particular cusp. Um, and if the restriction

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Is in the 50 to 70% range, that's considered moderate and over 70 severe.

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And then obviously if the CUSP doesn't move at all,

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then it's con considered a hundred percent. Now,

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another type of complication, much less common is infection, um,

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and endocarditis.

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So it turns out there's similar rates of endocarditis between savr and tavr.

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The reported rates are around two to 7%. Um,

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and the problem that can happen with endocarditis is that it may result in valve

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failure and require surgery, um, to take the TAVR valve,

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the infected TAVR valve out and replace it with a, uh,

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non-infected surgical valve.

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This is an example of a patient with infection of the TAVR device. Um,

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this patient's actually five years out from tavr and they saw an increased

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gradients and progressive heart failure symptoms.

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They actually didn't have really significant infection, uh, symptoms.

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They didn't have a fever at the time. But when you looked at the device,

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the evaluation was performed actually to look for halt.

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We saw this really nodular thickening of the actual valve leaflets. Um,

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you can see here, um, which, uh, prolapsed, uh,

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above and below the valve, um, so different from halt. We see these, um,

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actual vegetations on the valve in the setting of infection. This patient, uh,

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was unlucky enough to also have infection all along the mitral annulus. Um,

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and we're gonna actually review this case so we can actually see the, uh,

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cene images, um, in, in real time. Um, when I, uh, go separately to,

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to do the case review.

Report

Faculty

Stefan Loy Zimmerman, MD

Associate Professor of Radiology and Radiological Science

Johns Hopkins Medicine Department of Radiology and Radiological Science

Tags

Vascular

Idiopathic

Congenital

Cardiac valves

Cardiac

CTA

CT

Acquired/Developmental