| Literature DB >> 33330643 |
Amar Krishnaswamy1, Samir R Kapadia2.
Abstract
Patients with functional, or secondary, mitral regurgitation (FMR, SMR) often face significant symptoms that lead to functional decline as well as hospitalization and even death. Traditional mitral annuloplasty is an important treatment option for patients with FMR, but surgical risk and durability are important limitations. Percutaneous strategies are therefore a welcome alternative. The Carillon device utilizes the relationship of the coronary sinus and the mitral annulus to effect an "indirect" annuloplasty. Early series' and recent randomized trials suggest echocardiographic and clinical benefit with a relatively straight-forward implantation technique and low rate of significant complications.Entities:
Keywords: carillon; heart failure; indirect mitral annuloplasty; mitral regurgitation; percutaneous mitral valve repair
Year: 2020 PMID: 33330643 PMCID: PMC7715026 DOI: 10.3389/fcvm.2020.576058
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Cardiovasc Med ISSN: 2297-055X
Figure 1Indirect mitral annuloplasty using the Carillon device: (A) The Carillon consists of a band with two anchors. (B) Annular dilation is (C) improved with placement of the device resulting in improved MV coaptation. Reproduced from Witte et al. (10).
Figure 2Reduction in MR volume in the REDUCE-FMR trial: (A) Mean change in regurgitant volume at 12 months and (B) Reduction various time-points over the first year. Reproduced from Witte et al. (10).
Figure 3Coronary sinus (CS) dissection: (A) sinus venography for device sizing. (B) Deployment of the distal anchor (arrow) and cinching of the annulus. (C) Venography after device recapture due to circumflex coronary compression demonstrates dissection of the CS.
Figure 4Left circumflex coronary artery compression. (A) initial coronary angiogram. (B) distal anchor (bracket) causing compression of the proximal circumflex (arrow) (C) angiography after recapture of the Carillon demonstrates resolution of circumflex compression (arrow).