Index
Module 11 • Cardiology
Cardiovascular Critical Care I
69%
Data Tables
Cardiovascular Critical Care I
Sajni V. Patel ~3 min read Module 11 of 20
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Cardiovascular Critical Care I

Valvular

Disease Type

Management Considerations

Tricuspid

regurgitation

(TR)

Likely to influence pulmonary artery catheter assessments of cardiac output by way of

thermodilution technique

Can be influenced by infectious causes and presence of indwelling transvenous catheters

or leads; but moderate or severe TR is more commonly a marker of RV overload and

dysfunction

aInfective endocarditis can cause progressive valve disease, leading to regurgitant flow and impaired valve leaflet coaptation; however, it can also lead to near obstruction

in some cases.

bDegree of valvular disease is graded as mild, moderate, or severe, as defined by objective ECHO or catheter-based assessments.

C.Procedural or Surgical Correction
Table 14. Procedural or Surgical Correction (Circulation 2017; Available at http://circ.ahajournals.org/content/

early/2017/03/14/CIR.0000000000000503)

Balloon

valvuloplasty

Performed by percutaneous intervention as a temporizing intervention

Valve repair

May entail direct surgical repair of a damaged valve leaflet or implantation of a ring at the

valve annulus to facilitate improved coaptation of a regurgitant valve

Tissue

(bioprosthetic)

valve

Made of animal or human tissue
Usually does not require long-term anticoagulation (see Table 15)
Does not last as long as a mechanical valve (may last 10–15 yr)

Mechanical valve

Made of synthetic materials (newer valves use ceramic or carbon)
They are durable and generally unlikely to need replacement
Require lifelong anticoagulation
Warfarin is currently the only anticoagulant approved for use by the FDA in patients with

mechanical heart valves (see Table 15)

Transcatheter

aortic valve

replacement

(TAVR)

Made of animal tissue (bioprosthetic) and attached to a wire frame stent and placed using

catheter inside the old aortic valve

This may be considered in patients who are at higher perioperative risk for surgical aortic

valve replacement or when surgery is not an option

Anticoagulation and/or antiplatelet agents are required for at least a short time after TAVR

Transcatheter

edge-to-edge

repair (TEER)

Minimally invasive technique for treatment of symptomatic chronic moderate-severe or

severe primary (degenerative) mitral regurgitation in patients at prohibitive surgical risk

A leaflet repair device (MitraClip) is currently the only FDA approved device for this

indication

This device uses a cobalt chromium clip to suture the regurgitant orifices of the mitral

valve leaflets together, thereby increasing coaptation

Anticoagulation and/or antiplatelet agents are required for at least a short time after TEER
Table 13. Valvular Disease Characteristics and Management Considerationsa,b (Circulation 2021;143:e72–227)

(continued)

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