| Literature DB >> 36035046 |
Ankur Panchal1, Ramzi Khalil2, Georgios Lygouris2, Robert Biederman2, Andreas Kyvernitakis3.
Abstract
A 69-year-old woman with a mechanical aortic valve presented with decompensated heart failure. Emergent echocardiogram and fluoroscopy demonstrated acute aortic regurgitation due to a dysfunctional mechanical aortic valve and non-obstructive coronary disease. An emergent valve replacement was performed confirming a fixed-open valve with pathology demonstrating obstructive pannus formation without thrombosis or vegetation.Entities:
Keywords: aortic regurgitation; mechanical aortic valve; prosthetic valve obstruction; prosthetic valve pannus; valvular heart disease
Year: 2022 PMID: 36035046 PMCID: PMC9397150 DOI: 10.7759/cureus.27198
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cureus ISSN: 2168-8184
Pertinent lab results of the patient upon presentation
| Lab | Patient’s result | Normal range |
| Pro-BNP (Pro – B type natriuretic peptide) | 1635 pg/mL | <125 pg/mL |
| Troponin T | 0.43 ng/mL | 0-0.01 ng/mL |
| Lactate | 3.7 mmol/L | 0.5-2.2 mmol/L |
| INR (International normalized ratio) | 2.98 | <1.1 |
Figure 112-Lead EKG showing ST depression in precordial leads (black arrows).
Figure 2(A) Coronary angiogram revealing normal left coronary artery and immobile tilting disc mechanical aortic valve (black arrow). (B) Para-sternal long axis TTE image with broad-based early diastolic aortic insufficiency. (C) Pressure half time (PHT) of 46 milliseconds indicating severe aortic insufficiency. (D) Three chamber TEE image showing severe aortic insufficiency during early diastole.