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The Journal of Thoracic and Cardiovascular Surgery, Vol 83, 399-407, Copyright © 1982 by The American Association for Thoracic Surgery and The Western Thoracic Surgical Association
T Ishihara, VJ Ferrans, GR Barnhart, M Jones, CL McIntosh and WC Roberts
Intracuspal hematomas were found in three of 57 porcine valvular
bioprostheses implanted as substitute cardiac valves in 50 patients and in
11 of 29 similar bioprostheses implanted in sheep. The three values
implanted in patients had been in the mitral position for 27, 65, and 107
months. Of the valves implanted in sheep, six had been in the mitral
position and five in the tricuspid position for periods of time ranging
from 20 minutes to 7 months. In each patient and in four of 11 sheep, the
hematomas involved more than one cusp. These lesions were localized in the
spongiosa, extended from the basal region toward the free edge of the cusp,
and formed a plane of dissection which involved the spaces left in the
spongiosa by the removal of proteoglycan material during preimplantation
commercial processing. In one patient, the hematomas limited the mobility
of the cusps and appeared to have been the cause of clinically significant
prosthetic mitral stenosis; in the other two patients and in the
experimental animals, the hematomas were smaller and of uncertain
hemodynamic significance. Intracuspal hematomas may become sites of
eventual formation of calcific deposits. The pathogenesis of intracuspal
hematomas is related to the entry of blood into the space between the
sewing ring and the most basilar region of the bioprosthetic tissue. This
space extends throughout the circumference of the bioprosthesis and is
continuous with the spongiosa, the layer in which the hematoma develops.
The blood penetrates into this space through the suture line between
bioprosthetic tissue and sewing ring on the inflow surface of porcine
valvular bioprostheses which have been mounted on atrioventricular type
stents. Intracuspal hematomas were not found in bioprostheses mounted on
aortic type stents, in which these sutures are more protected and more
closely spaced, or in pericardial bioprostheses, which do not have a
spongiosa.
ARTICLES
Intracuspal hematomas in implanted porcine valvular bioprostheses: clinical and experimental studies
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