Difference between revisions of "Aortic valve repair or replacement"

From WikiAnesthesia
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=== Monitoring and access<!-- List and/or describe monitors and access typically needed for this case. Please describe rationale for any special monitors or access. --> ===
=== Monitoring and access<!-- List and/or describe monitors and access typically needed for this case. Please describe rationale for any special monitors or access. --> ===
* Arterial line (usually before induction)
* Central access (usually double stick with single lumen and cordis)
* +/- PA catheter (especially in LV dysfunction, pulmonary HTN)
* TEE


=== Induction and airway management<!-- Describe the important considerations and general approach to the induction of anesthesia and how the airway is typically managed for this case. --> ===
=== Induction and airway management<!-- Describe the important considerations and general approach to the induction of anesthesia and how the airway is typically managed for this case. --> ===
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Revision as of 10:02, 17 February 2026

Aortic valve repair or replacement
Anesthesia type

General

Airway

ETT

Lines and access

PIV, Arterial line, Central line, +/- PA catheter

Monitors

Standard ASA, arterial line BP, CVP +/- PAP, TEE, NIRS

Primary anesthetic considerations
Preoperative

-Severity of lesion (AS vs AR) -Symptoms (syncope, angina, dyspnea) -LV function and size (hypertrophy) -Coronary disease (concomitant CABG) -Pulmonary HTN -Rhythm (atrial fibrillation)

Intraoperative

-Hemodynamic goals (AS vs AR) -Full heparinization before CPB -Myocardial protection and de-airing -Conduction disturbance after valve replacement -Weaning from CPB: LV/RV function, valve seating, gradients

Postoperative

-Vasoplegia -Low cardiac output syndrome -Conduction abnormalities -Bleeding -Early vs delayed extubation

Article quality
Editor rating
Unrated
User likes
0

Aortic valve repair or replacement is performed for aortic stenosis (AS), aortic regurgitation (AR), or mixed disease. It is performed with sternotomy under cardiopulmonary bypass (CPB). Surgical aortic valve replacement (SAVR) involves excision of the native valve and implantation of a mechanical or bioprosthetic prosthesis.

Indications:

  • Symptomatic severe AS
  • Severe AR with LV dilation or dysfunction
  • Endocarditis with structural destruction
  • Concomitant CABG requirement
  • Root/ascending aortic pathology

Unlike Transcatheter aortic valve replacement, SAVR allows:

  • Complete annular debridement
  • Abscess repair
  • Annular enlargement
  • Root replacement
  • Concomitant multivessel CABG
  • Durability advantage in younger patients

Transcatheter aortic valve replacement (TAVR) is preferred in:

  • Elderly patients
  • High or prohibitive surgical risk
  • Frailty or hostile chest[1]

Preoperative management

Patient evaluation

System Considerations
Neurologic -Syncope history (critical AS)

-Carotid disease (stroke risk)

Cardiovascular -AVA, mean gradient, velocity (severity)

-LVEF, LVH vs LV dilation (pressure or volume overload)

-Diastolic dysfunction (preload sensitivity)

-pulmonary HTN (RV risk post bypass)

-CAD (concomitant CABG)

-Rhythm (atrial fibrillation)

Pulmonary -Restrictive lung physiology (HF/sternotomy)

-COPD (prolonged vent weaning)

Gastrointestinal -Dysphagia, esophageal/GI tract surgeries (TEE)
Hematologic -Anticoagulation use, blood products available
Renal -Baseline Cr, kidney disease (CPB AKI risk)
Endocrine -DM
Other -Endocarditis (longer CPB)

Echocardiography

Severe Aortic Stenosis - AVA < 1cm2, mean pressure gradient > 40mmHg, peak velocity > 4m/sSevere Aortic Regurgitation - vena contracta > 6mm, pressure half-time < 200ms, holodiastolic flow reversal in the descending aorta > 20cm/s

Conduction System Risk

AV node and bundle of His lie near membranous septum, so sutures placed in annulus can damage conduction tissue. This is higher risk with pre-existing RBBB, heavy annular calcification, and endocarditis with abscess. Permanent pacemaker rate: ~3-8%

Labs and studies

  • CBC, CMP, PT/PTT
  • T&C pRBC FFP
  • TTE/TEE, cardiac cath, EKG, CXR

Operating room setup

  • Have at least 5-8 channels for infusions
    • Epinephrine, norepinephrine, carrier, insulin (some institutions use phenylephrine in place of norepi)
    • Consider ketamine, dexmedetomidine, cefazolin
  • Drugs:
    • Emergency medications (bolus):
      • epinephrine, atropine
      • Other bolus vasopressors (e.g. vasopressin, phenylephrine, norepinephrine)
      • +/- esmolol, nicardipine, and nitroprusside
    • Heparin, protamine, calcium
    • +/- Magnesium
  • Perfusion technician should be available along with cell saver
  • Fluid warmer
  • Triple transducers primed and zeroed
  • Internal defibrillator/pacer available in room
  • TEE machine with appropriately sized probe

Patient preparation and premedication

  • Continue beta blockers, statins, antianginals
  • Hold ACE inhibitors, DOACs per protocol

Regional and neuraxial techniques

  • Pre-Op: Erector Spinae Plane Block -- check departmental policy as institutions vary on candidacy for pre-op block based on vessel pathology
  • Intra-op: Parasternal Intercostal Block - after sternal wound closure and prior to emergence

Intraoperative management

Monitoring and access

  • Arterial line (usually before induction)
  • Central access (usually double stick with single lumen and cordis)
  • +/- PA catheter (especially in LV dysfunction, pulmonary HTN)
  • TEE

Induction and airway management

Positioning

Maintenance and surgical considerations

Emergence

Postoperative management

Disposition

  • Cardiac ICU

Pain management

  • Parasternal block
  • Multimodal analgesia

Potential complications

  • Complete heart block (AV node lies near membranous septum and can be damaged during annular suturing)
  • Atrial fibrillation
  • Vasoplegia (CPB induced inflammatory state with low SVR despite normal EF)
  • Low cardiac output syndrome (can be from ischemia, LVH stiffness, afterload mismatch, prosthesis-patient mismatch)
  • Bleeding/re-exploration
  • Stroke (aortic manipulation, calcified debris, air embolism)
  • Acute kidney injury

Mechanical valve is more durable but carries higher bleeding risk and requires lifelong anticoagulation

Procedure variants

Mechanical Bioprosthetic AVR+CABG Minimally invasive AVR
Unique considerations
Position
Surgical time
EBL
Postoperative disposition
Pain management
Potential complications

References

  1. Otto, Catherine M.; Nishimura, Rick A.; Bonow, Robert O.; Carabello, Blase A.; Erwin, John P.; Gentile, Federico; Jneid, Hani; Krieger, Eric V.; Mack, Michael; McLeod, Christopher; O’Gara, Patrick T. (2021-02-02). "2020 ACC/AHA Guideline for the Management of Patients With Valvular Heart Disease: A Report of the American College of Cardiology/American Heart Association Joint Committee on Clinical Practice Guidelines". Circulation. 143 (5). doi:10.1161/CIR.0000000000000923. ISSN 0009-7322.