Difference between revisions of "Mitral valve repair or replacement"

From WikiAnesthesia
(Added TMVR comparison in indications section)
(Finished surgical procedure overview section)
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-Pulmonary HTN, RV function
-Pulmonary HTN, RV function
-Chronic atrial fibrillation
-Chronic atrial fibrillation
-Thromboemoblism risk (LA thrombus)
-Thromboembolism risk (LA thrombus)
-Concomitant procedures (CABG, MAZE, multi valves)
-Concomitant procedures (CABG, MAZE, multi valves)
| considerations_intraoperative = -Hemodynamic goals (MS vs MR)
| considerations_intraoperative = -Hemodynamic goals (MS vs MR)
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=== Surgical procedure<!-- Briefly describe the major steps of this surgical procedure. --> ===
=== Surgical procedure<!-- Briefly describe the major steps of this surgical procedure. --> ===
Most commonly performed via median sternotomy, but minimally invasive approaches exists.
After systemic heparinization (ACT > 480 seconds), cardiopulmonary bypass is established with aortic and right atrial (or bicaval) cannulation. Aortic cross-clamp is applied, and myocardial protection is achieved through cold blood cardioplegia delivered either through aortic root (antegrade) and/or coronary sinus (retrograde).
Left atriotomy (via interatrial groove or transseptal approach) is performed and mitral valve is directly inspected to determine mechanism of pathology.
Repair techniques include annuloplasty ring placement, leaflet resection, chordal replacement, or commissurotomy (MS).
Replacement involves native valve excision (preserving posterior leaflet, if possible, to maintain ventricular geometry). Mechanical or bioprosthetic valve is then implanted. Sutures are placed circumferentially around the annulus. Preservation of subvalvular apparatus reduces postoperative LV dysfunction.
Concomitant MAZE procedure frequently performed in patients with chronic atrial fibrillation and involves surgical ablation lines created in atria. This can be combined with left atrial appendage ligation or excision.
De-airing is critical due to open left atrium and TEE guidance before cross-clamp removal. After reperfusion and rewarming, patient is weaned from CPB.
Temporary epicardial pacing wires are routinely placed due to risk of conduction disturbances. After protamine administration and hemostasis, chest closure is performed.


== Preoperative management ==
== Preoperative management ==

Revision as of 08:28, 2 March 2026

Mitral 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 and mechanism of lesion (MS vs MR, primary vs secondary) -LV size and systolic function -Pulmonary HTN, RV function -Chronic atrial fibrillation -Thromboembolism risk (LA thrombus) -Concomitant procedures (CABG, MAZE, multi valves)

Intraoperative

-Hemodynamic goals (MS vs MR) -Full heparinization before CPB -Myocardial protection and de-airing -Conduction disturbances -Weaning from CPB: LV/RV function, valve seating, gradients

Postoperative

-RV failure -SAM -Atrial fibrillation -Low cardiac output syndrome -Bleeding

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Mitral valve repair or replacement is performed for severe mitral regurgitation (MR), mitral stenosis (MS), or mixed disease. Repair is preferred when possible because it preserves annular-ventricular continuity, maintains LV geometry, improves long-term survival, and avoids prosthetic complications. Replacement (SMVR) is performed when repair is not durable or technically feasible (severe calcifications, rheumatic disease, extensive endocarditis).

Overview

Indications

  • Symptomatic severe primary (degenerative) MR
  • Symptomatic severe MS
  • Severe secondary (functional) MR with persistent symptoms despite GDMT
  • Severe MR with LV dilation or LV dysfunction
  • Recurrent MR after primary repair
  • Endocarditis with structural destruction
  • Concomitant need during CABG or other valve surgery

Unlike Transcatheter mitral valve repair/replacement, SMVR allows:

  • Complete annular debridement
  • Abscess debridement
  • Annular enlargement
  • Leaflet resection and chordal reconstruction
  • Preservation of subvalvular apparatus
  • Concomitant procedures like MAZE, left atrial appendage excision, tricuspid repair, or CABG
  • Durability advantage in primary MR in low risk patients

Transcatheter mitral valve repair/replacement (TMVR) is preferred in:

  • Elderly patients
  • High or prohibitive surgical risk
  • Frailty or hostile chest

Surgical procedure

Most commonly performed via median sternotomy, but minimally invasive approaches exists.

After systemic heparinization (ACT > 480 seconds), cardiopulmonary bypass is established with aortic and right atrial (or bicaval) cannulation. Aortic cross-clamp is applied, and myocardial protection is achieved through cold blood cardioplegia delivered either through aortic root (antegrade) and/or coronary sinus (retrograde).

Left atriotomy (via interatrial groove or transseptal approach) is performed and mitral valve is directly inspected to determine mechanism of pathology.

Repair techniques include annuloplasty ring placement, leaflet resection, chordal replacement, or commissurotomy (MS).

Replacement involves native valve excision (preserving posterior leaflet, if possible, to maintain ventricular geometry). Mechanical or bioprosthetic valve is then implanted. Sutures are placed circumferentially around the annulus. Preservation of subvalvular apparatus reduces postoperative LV dysfunction.

Concomitant MAZE procedure frequently performed in patients with chronic atrial fibrillation and involves surgical ablation lines created in atria. This can be combined with left atrial appendage ligation or excision.

De-airing is critical due to open left atrium and TEE guidance before cross-clamp removal. After reperfusion and rewarming, patient is weaned from CPB.

Temporary epicardial pacing wires are routinely placed due to risk of conduction disturbances. After protamine administration and hemostasis, chest closure is performed.

Preoperative management

Patient evaluation

System Considerations
Airway
Neurologic
Cardiovascular
Pulmonary
Gastrointestinal
Hematologic
Renal
Endocrine
Other

Labs and studies

Operating room setup

Patient preparation and premedication

Regional and neuraxial techniques

Intraoperative management

Monitoring and access

Induction and airway management

Positioning

Maintenance and surgical considerations

Emergence

Postoperative management

Disposition

Pain management

Potential complications

Procedure variants

Variant 1 Variant 2
Unique considerations
Indications
Position
Surgical time
EBL
Postoperative disposition
Pain management
Potential complications

References