| Literature DB >> 34961532 |
Jennie H Kwon1, Morgan Hill2, Brielle Gerry2, Steven W Kubalak3, Muhammad Mohiuddin4, Minoo N Kavarana2, T Konrad Rajab2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Heart valve replacement in neonates and infants is one of the remaining unsolved problems in cardiac surgery because conventional valve prostheses do not grow with the children. Similarly, heart valve replacement in children and young adults with contraindications to anticoagulation remains an unsolved problem because mechanical valves are thrombogenic and bioprosthetic valves are prone to early degeneration. Therefore, there is an urgent clinical need for growing heart valve replacements that are durable without the need for anticoagulation.Entities:
Keywords: Aortic valve replacement; Aortic valve transplantation; Partial heart transplantation; Xenotransplantation
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34961532 PMCID: PMC8714421 DOI: 10.1186/s13019-021-01743-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Cardiothorac Surg ISSN: 1749-8090 Impact factor: 1.637
Fig. 1Heart valve xenotransplantation involves temporary immune suppression until the transplanted valve can be exchanged for an adult-sized prosthetic valve in the grown child
Fig. 2Heart valve transplantation overlaps with conventional heart transplantation from a immunology perspective and homograft valve replacement from a surgical perspective
Fig. 3The donor valve is prepared by trimming the ventricular muscle and mitral valve to within 2–3 mm of the aortic valve annulus. The sinuses of valsalva were also trimmed, leaving only the commissural posts suspending the aortic valve behind. Panel A shows the superior view, panel B shows the lateral view of the valve
Fig. 4The human recipient aorta is opened and the diseased aortic valve excised similar to a conventional aortic valve replacement. Transection of the aorta above the sinotubular junction optimizes the exposure
Fig. 5Mattress sutures are placed through the native aortic annulus and the donor valve annulus to allow parachuting the donor valve into the recipient aortic root
Fig. 6The donor valve commissural pillars are suspended in the recipient aorta using mattress sutures
Fig. 7Heart valve xenotransplantation raises the possibility that appropriate sized donor valves will be delivered from regional facilities to hospitals “just in time” for transplantation