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J Thorac Cardiovasc Surg 1999;118:57-65
© 1999 Mosby, Inc.
SURGERY FOR ACQUIRED CARDIOVASCULAR DISEASE |
From the Departments of Clinical Physiologya and Thoracic and Cardiovascular Surgery,b Sahlgrenska University Hospital, Göteborg, Sweden.
The study was supported by grants from the Göteborg Medical Society, Sahlgrenska University Hospital, and the Swedish Heart and Lung Foundation.
Address for reprints: Odd Bech-Hanssen, MD, Department of Clinical Physiology, Sahlgrenska University Hospital, SE-413 45 Göteborg, Sweden.
| Abstract |
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| Introduction |
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The regression in LV mass is likely to be influenced by the prosthetic valve type and size. A regression in LV mass after aortic valve replacement has been documented,
5-7 but only a few studies describe the impact of valve size.
5,6 One recent report on the importance of prosthetic type (stented and stentless biologic valves vs bileaflet mechanical valves) did not find any statistically significant differences in regression of LV mass, but the number of patients studied was small.
8
The aims of the present study were to evaluate the effects of valve replacement per se and of valve type (mechanical or biologic) and size on postoperative LV mass and LV systolic and diastolic function.
| Patients and methods |
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The St Jude Medical Standard Valve is a bileaflet pyrolytic carbon valve with an 85-degree leaflet angle in the open position. The monoleaflet Omnicarbon valve consists of pyrolytic carbon with a maximum opening angle of 80 degrees. The Biocor valve used in this study is a stented, glutaraldehyde-preserved porcine bioprosthesis. The Biocor valve design allows both intra-annular and supra-annular insertion, but during the study period only the intra-annular position was used.
M-mode and 2-dimensional echocardiography
Echocardiography was performed with an Acuson 128 or 128XP Computed Sonograph (Acuson, Mountain View, Calif) or a Vingmed CFM 750 device (Vingmed Sound AS, Horten, Norway, 17 investigations). Both M-mode recordings and off-line measurements were guided by the 2-dimensional image. M-mode measurements were made according to the recommendations of the American Society of Echocardiography.
10 The ejection fraction was calculated according to Teichholz and associates
11 and the LV mass by means of the cube formula.
12
Doppler measurements
Blood flow velocity in the LV outflow tract was estimated by pulsed wave Doppler from an apical 4-chamber view (sample size of 5 mm). Mitral flow was recorded between the mitral leaflets in the 4-chamber view. From the mitral velocity tracings (paper speed 100 mm/s), early flow velocity (E), deceleration time of E wave, and peak velocity during atrial systole (A) were measured. Pulmonary venous flow velocities were obtained from the upper right pulmonary vein (paper speed 50 mm/s). Peak velocities during systole (S) and diastole (D) were measured. Continuous wave Doppler signals were recorded from multiple windows by a 2-MHZ non-imaging probe.
The stroke volume was calculated as the product of the cross-sectional area of the LV outflow tract (CSA) and the velocity time integral (VTILVOT). The cardiac index was calculated as the product of heart rate and stroke volume divided by the body surface area. Pressure gradients were calculated according to the simplified Bernoulli equation (Doppler pressure gradient = 4 x [peak velocity]2). The mean gradients were calculated from off-line planimetry of the continuous wave Doppler recordings. The effective orifice area was calculated according to the integral method: Effective orifice area = CSA x (VTILVOT/VTImax).
13
Normal limits and patterns describing diastolic function
The diastolic function was evaluated by integrating mitral flow and pulmonary venous information. Three different filling patterns were described: type A, normal diastolic function; type B, normal mitral E/A ratio and S/D ratio, mild-to-moderate diastolic dysfunction with normal or slightly increased LV filling pressure, decreased E/A ratio, and normal S/D; and type C, severe diastolic dysfunction with increased LV filling pressure, decreased S/D ratio, and normal or increased E/A ratio. The normal limits for mitral flow E/A and pulmonary venous flow S/D ratios were defined as being within 90% of the normal distribution (mean ± 1.65 standard deviation). The healthy control group consisted of 33 men and 27 women without hypertension or diabetes mellitus, with a normal resting electrocardiogram, and without any history of heart disease. The mitral and pulmonary venous flow parameters describing diastolic function are age dependent.
14 We therefore made a separate determination of the normal limits for mitral flow E/A ratio and pulmonary venous S/D ratio for patients less than 60 years old and 60 years of age or older.
Statistics
Continuous variables are summarized with the use of mean and standard deviation. Categoric variables are summarized with the use of absolute and relative frequencies. Differences between investigations were evaluated by means of a paired Student t test. Proportions between patient groups were tested by use of a
2 test, and changes in proportions within a group of patients were tested by the Wilcoxon signed rank test. The results for the primary efficacy variables are presented together with 95% confidence intervals (CI). No adjustments for multiple statistical testing were performed. The relationship between prosthesis size and Doppler echocardiographic variables was evaluated by simple linear regression analysis calculating R2 (Pearson's coefficient of variation). A multiple regression analysis was performed to identify factors important to LV mass reduction and mean Doppler gradient across the prosthesis. The variables tested for LV mass reduction were age, sex, severity of aortic stenosis (mean pressure gradient), blood pressure, and prosthesis characteristics (type, size, mean prosthesis gradient, and effective orifice area). In the case of the mean Doppler gradient across the prosthesis, the variables tested were body size (body surface area), flow through the prosthesis (cardiac index), and prosthesis characteristics (type and size).
Interobserver and intraobserver variability
At our laboratory, the interobserver/intraobserver variability, defined as the mean value of difference/mean value of measurements in percent, is as follows; for 2-dimensionally guided M-mode echocardiography (LV diameter in diastole), 1%/1%; Doppler measurements (mitral early deceleration time), 5%/12%; calculations based on Doppler measurements (E/A ratio), 9%/8%; calculations based on 2-dimensional and Doppler measurements (effective orifice area), 2%/1%; and LV mass calculations based on M-mode echocardiography, 11%/4%.
| Results |
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30 days after valve replacement), whereas the cause was noncardiac in 46% of those who died later (13/19). The patients who were not alive at follow-up and the patients who did not want to participate had similar preoperative Doppler echocardiographic findings (stenosis severity, ejection fraction, LV mass, and diastolic function parameters) compared with the study subjects.
Influence of aortic valve replacement
The preoperative functional status assessed according to the NYHA classification was comparable for patients with mechanical valves and patients with biologic valves. Dyspnea was the dominant preoperative symptom. The percentage of patients with severe dyspnea (NYHA classes III and IV) decreased from 53% to 13% (P = .001) and with angina from 31% to 7% (P = .001). There was no difference in the effect of valve replacement between mechanical and bioprosthetic valves.
LV diastolic and systolic diameter indexed to body surface area decreased and the ejection fraction and cardiac index increased (Tables IIa and IIb). The ejection fraction increased from 62% (95% CI: 59.7%-64.7%) to 65% (95% CI: 62.2%-67%) (P = .002) in the postoperative period, whereas the cardiac index increased from 2.6 L/min per square meter (95% CI: 2.48-2.72 L/min per square meter) to 3.1 L/min per square meter (95% CI: 2.94-3.26 L/min per square meter) (P = .001). The proportion of patients who had an increase in ejection fraction was 64%, whereas the figure for cardiac index was 72%. Fig. 1 shows that the effects of aortic valve replacement on ejection fraction were most pronounced among patients with a severely reduced ejection fraction before the operation. The proportion of patients with normal diastolic function (type A) assessed from mitral and pulmonary venous velocity recordings increased because of a reduction in the number of patients with mild-to-moderate diastolic dysfunction (type B)(Fig. 2). There were no statistically significant differences between mechanical and biologic valves. After aortic valve replacement, the LV mass index decreased 42.4 g (95% CI: 35-50 g), which constitutes a reduction of 24% (95% CI: 20%-28%).
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| Discussion |
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Diastolic function improved, but 2 years after the operation a large proportion of the patients (34%) still showed signs of disturbed filling properties and increased LV mass. This lack of normalization might be an expression of patient-prosthesis mismatch with an important LV pressure load. However, the patients were investigated 26 months after the operation (range 16-60 months), and this may be an insufficient period in which to achieve a regression in LV mass and diastolic dysfunction. Using hemodynamic and endomyocardial biopsy studies, Monrad,
7 Krayenbuehl,
16 and their associates have shown that the process of myocardial remodeling occurs over many years. They found that for patients with aortic stenosis undergoing aortic valve replacement, the LV mass index was reduced from 114 g/m2 at an intermediate postoperative investigation (1.6 ± 0.5 years) to 97 g/m2 at a late investigation (8.1 ± 2.9 years). Their studies myocardial structure revealed that the regression in LV mass at the intermediate stage after aortic valve replacement was due to a decrease in myocardial cellular hypertrophy with an increase in relative interstitial fibrosis.
16 At the late investigation, the LV fibrous content also decreased. When the passive diastolic properties were determined at the intermediate stage, the patients had increased myocardial stiffness, which normalized at a late stage after aortic valve replacement.
17,18 From these studies, we can expect a further reduction in LV mass with less disturbed diastolic function in our patient group.
In our study, we found an improvement in systolic function with a decrease in diastolic and systolic dimensions and an increase in ejection fraction. The increase in ejection fraction was more than an adjustment to reduced LV volumes, inasmuch as the cardiac index was also increased. This finding is in accordance with those of other investigators, and improved systolic function has been shown to occur during the operation, immediately after aortic valve replacement.
7,19 We observed a marked improvement in cardiac index and ejection fraction among patients with the most severe preoperative dysfunction, which implies that a decrease in preoperative ejection fraction caused by excess afterload does not preclude a postoperative improvement in LV function. Systolic dysfunction in patients with aortic stenosis is therefore due predominantly to afterload excess rather than to intrinsic myocardial damage.
Influence of prosthetic valve type and size
We found higher pressure gradients in biologic valves than in mechanical valves. This implies that the LV pressure is higher in patients with biologic valves, which could explain a less pronounced regression in LV mass index. Our findings differ from those of others, for LV mass index decreased in patients with 19 and 21 mm valves.
5,6González-Juanatey,
5 Sim,
6 and their colleagues both included patients with small biologic valves (8/12 and 8/10, respectively, receiving valve size 19 mm), and they found no statistically significant regression in LV mass index in these groups of patients. In the present study, patients were investigated prospectively and randomized to either a mechanical or a biologic prosthesis with the important exception of those patients with a small aortic root (size 19 or 21 mm), who all received a mechanical valve. This selection policy probably has influenced our results. The less pronounced regression of LV mass index reported by others could therefore be due to valve type rather than valve size.
Prosthesis-patient mismatch
In some patients with a large body surface area relative to aortic root dimensions, or in physically active individuals, can a small prosthetic valve cause an obstruction of hemodynamic importance?
20,21 This prosthesis-patient mismatch has been claimed to be present at an effective orifice area index of 0.85 cm2/m2 or less.
22 We found effective orifice area indices indicating prosthesis-patient mismatch in the majority of patients receiving valve sizes of 23 mm or smaller. It was therefore unexpected to find only a weak relationship between prosthetic valve size and regression of LV mass index. Limitations in the Doppler echocardiographic method could cause some underestimation of the effective orifice area. However, this finding might also illustrate a limitation in the effective orifice area index as a measure of prosthetic function. There is a pronounced normal variation in cardiac index, and individuals with an identical effective orifice area index may have quite different transprosthetic flow and pressure gradients. Most patients receiving small prosthetic valves are elderly women, and it is therefore possible that a low physical activity level in these patients further helps to reduce the pressure burden.
Our findings of a reduction in LV mass index in patients with small aortic valve sizes should not be interpreted as an argument that prosthesis-patient mismatch is not a problem. The possibility of obstruction after valve replacement should always be kept in mind when there is a discrepancy between aortic root diameter and body surface area or if the patient is physically active. We have previously shown that it is possible to use a preoperative echocardiographic measurement of the LV outflow tract to identify most of the patients who will receive a small prosthesis.
23 It is an obvious advantage to know in advance that a patient is likely to receive a small prosthesis, because this will facilitate alternatives such as homograft insertion, enlargement of the aortic root, or supra-annular implantation.
Study limitations
In the present study we investigated patients approximately 2 years after aortic valve replacement. The patients who did not want to participate (n = 16) in the late follow-up and those who died of cardiac related causes (n = 13) were preoperatively similar to the study subjects in terms of severity of aortic stenosis, LV mass, and systolic and diastolic function parameters. Therefore it is not likely that our results are importantly biased by this loss of patients.
Another possible cause of bias in the present study is the fact that we do not at our institution use small stented biologic valves (size 19 or 21 mm) to avoid prosthesis-patient mismatch. It is conceivable that including these valves would have made the overall differences between mechanical and biologic valves more pronounced in terms of prosthesis gradients and LV mass regression.
In this study, we compared pressure gradients and effective orifice areas in biologic and mechanical prosthetic heart valves. However, several in vitro studies reveal that valve design influences the flow velocity profile, pressure decrease profile, and calculated orifice area.
24,25 Localized increased flow velocity and pressure recovery have been shown to cause an overestimation of pressure decrease and underestimation of effective orifice area. This phenomenon is probably most pronounced in bileaflet mechanical valves,
25 but it has also been claimed to introduce errors in estimations of pressure gradients in biologic valves.
26The pressure decreases and calculated effective orifice area in one prosthetic valve type are therefore not necessarily comparable with those found with another valve design. The group of patients with mechanical valves consists of two different valve types, a bileaflet valve (St Jude Medical) and a monoleaflet valve (Omnicarbon). However, the two valve designs do not differ in terms of Doppler echocardiographic findings (peak velocity, gradients, or effective orifice area).
9 These limitations in the Doppler echocardiographic assessment of prosthesis hemodynamics might explain some of the lack of relation between prosthesis gradients, effective orifice area, and LV mass regression.
Clinical implication
We found more extensive (approximately double) reduction in LV mass index with mechanical prostheses than with bioprostheses of the same size, a finding that might need consideration in the individual choice of prosthetic valve. However, we do not yet know whether a concomitantly possible lower-risk reduction with a bioprosthesis is overbalanced by fewer vascular events.
Small biologic valves (19 and 21 mm) often result in obstruction and are usually avoided. This implies that many elderly female patients with narrow aortic roots and a life expectancy that does not exceed that of a biologic prosthesis receive a mechanical valve for hemodynamic reasons. An alternative approach in these elderly patients might be to insert a 23-mm biologic valve after performing an aortic root enlargement or to insert the prosthesis in a supra-annular position. We found no statistically significant differences in hemodynamics or LV mass index regression between 21-mm mechanical valves and 23-mm biologic valves, and the use of biologic valves might beneficially influence the outcome, because it would reduce the complications associated with anticoagulant therapy. However, this would prolong the aortic crossclamp time in a prognostically unfavorable way.
27
| Acknowledgments |
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| References |
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