Fibrinolytic therapy in thrombosis of a mitral valve prosthesis
A 48-year-old woman presented with progressive dyspnea due to thrombosis of a mitral valve prosthesis. The patient had undergone mitral valve replacement (St. Jude Medical) six years prior to admission because of mitral stenosis (Class III); three years later the prosthesis had to be replaced (St. Jude Medical) because of valve thrombosis. At admission, transesophageal echocardiography showed a thrombus on the atrial side of the fixed valve leaflet and a thrombus (2.4 x 1.6 cm) floating from the left atrial roof. Because of the previous thoracotomies, thrombolysis was initiated despite the mobile thrombus with the attendant risk of embolization. Urokinase was infused in a dose to maintain the fibrinogen level around 100 mg/dl. After 24 h, the mean pressure gradient across the prosthetic mitral valve (measured by doppler echocardiography) had decreased from 23 to 11 mmHg. After 13 days of this modified thrombolytic regimen, the clinical symptoms of the patient had resolved and echocardiography showed a normal function of the prosthetic mitral valve without evidence of residual thrombosis. This patient demonstrates that prolonged cautious thrombolysis can be effective for the treatment of prosthetic valve thrombosis in hemodynamically moderately compromised patients.