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TAVR Balloon Expanded Device Case Review

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This case,

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we wanna review a typical appearance of a balloon expanded TAVR

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device.

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So this is a CT examination that was obtained with cardiac gating in

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this patient. They were worried about hypo attenuating leaflet thickening,

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which, uh, something that we talk about in later videos in the course.

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But in fact, actually it was, was normal. The leaflets were normal.

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And so this is,

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I'm just showing this as an example of what you would see with a typical balloon

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expanded, uh, type of TAVR valve. So on the axial images,

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you'll notice that the struts are really dense.

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And this is important to think about because if you're ever doing any post TAVR

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imaging,

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you always wanna make sure to turn off any dose modulation strategies because

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that actually results in so much artifact because of these dense struts that you

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can't actually visualize the structures inside.

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So you always wanna make sure to turn off dose modulation whenever you're

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scanning these post TAVR cases. And then these are the TAVR leaflets themselves.

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You see that they're, um,

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thin leaflets here and they're suspended by the actual TAVR stent

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itself. Now I'm reviewing this on my packs and you know,

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I think just showing that for sort of ease of use within my packs,

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I do have the ability to do some multiplanar reforms,

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which I'm gonna show you here with these multiplanar reforms.

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Just ignore what's going on with this red line and it's not really relevant to

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what we're gonna look at. So for this particular case,

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if you look at on the other views,

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you can see the coronal view actually gives you a nice look at what's going on

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with this TAVR device.

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The balloon expanded device is shorter than the self-expanding,

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which we're gonna show next.

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And you'll see the device actually sits below the levels.

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Here's one of the coronary arteries.

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So here's the coronary art osteum and it's above the level of the TAVR device.

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I can show that a little bit better by doing another oblique reform.

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Show you that. So with that oblique reformat,

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now you can see here really nicely.

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Here's the top of the device and there's the origin.

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So that's one of the reasons it's really important for us to measure coronary

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heights.

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We wanna make sure that the coronary lie above the device and they're not

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blocked by the device itself. Another thing to point out here, as you can see,

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this hunk of calcium here, that's outside the device itself.

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This is actually one of those displaced valve leaflets.

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You know that when we place the device,

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we're actually pushing the native diseased leaflets away,

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and you can see here that's nestled into the sinus for this particular patient,

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which had enough room to accommodate those leaflets.

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One other thing I'm gonna do is I'm just show you a,

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a short axis view looking down the barrel,

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just so you know what these look like. Here's a down the barrel view.

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Here are the prosthetic aortic valve cusps. Notice the sinuses here,

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right coronary, non coronary and left coronary sinuses.

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You can see this wide open right coronary osteo.

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And then you can also see the disease leaflet in the right cusp that I pointed

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out earlier. Finally, the, the right coronary osteo is,

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is actually heavily diseased and quite high in this patient,

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so well above the top of the struts for this particular device. So again,

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this is a balloon expanded device, which is low profile,

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and it's below the coronary artery origins.

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 CT (SCCT Cat B1 Video Case)

Cardiac

CTA

CT

Acquired/Developmental