A case of aortic valve replacement with St. Jude Medical Regent valve (first implant in Japan).

Journal: Annals Of Thoracic And Cardiovascular Surgery : Official Journal Of The Association Of Thoracic And Cardiovascular Surgeons Of Asia
Published:
Abstract

The St. Jude Medical (SJM) Regent valve was developed as a new mechanical valve by improving the conventional SJM valve. The effective orifice area is wider than that of Hemodynamic Plus (HP) series. The efficacy of the new valve has been reported in Europe and the United States. On October 26, 2004, we first performed aortic valve replacement (AVR) with the SJM Regent valve for aortic valve stenosis in Japan. A 64-year-old female was admitted to our hospital with dyspnea on exertion. She was diagnosed with aortic valve stenosis. She underwent AVR with a 17 mm SJM Regent valve. According to the results of echocardiography conducted two months postoperatively, the peak pressure gradient of the prosthetic valve was 32.0 mmHg, the mean pressure gradient was 13.2 mmHg, and the effective orifice area index (EOAI) was 0.92 cm2/m2. Cinefluoroscopy showed the valve opening angle of 85 degrees indicating full opening. She was discharged 15 days after surgery without complications. As demonstrated by the present case, implantation of a 17 mm SJM Regent valve produced a satisfactory result reflected by lower pressure gradient and absence of patient-prosthetic mismatch. In the future, the new valve is expected to be the optimum mechanical valve for a narrow annulus.

Authors
Akira Sezai, Motomi Shiono, Kenji Akiyama, Yukihiko Orime, Mitsumasa Hata, Mitsuru Iida, Isamu Yoshitake, Shinji Wakui, Makoto Taoka, Tomofumi Umeda, Nanao Negishi, Yukiyasu Sezai, Yuji Kasamaki