4.3 Article

Inflammation and infection in nine surgically explanted Medtronic Freestyle® stentless aortic valves

Journal

CARDIOVASCULAR PATHOLOGY
Volume 16, Issue 5, Pages 258-267

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE INC
DOI: 10.1016/j.carpath.2007.01.009

Keywords

stentless valves; inflammation; prosthetic heart valves; infection; freestyle valves

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Background: The Medtronic Freestyle valve is fixed in glutaraldehyde at zero pressure on the cusps and treated with a-amino oleic acid. This valve reportedly has excellent clinical and hemodynamic results, but little has been reported about its long-term pathology. Methods and results: Nine Freestyle valves explanted between 2003 and 2005 were reviewed to assess the reasons for bioprosthesis failure (six implanted at our institution). All valves were examined in detail, using histochemistry and immunohistochemistry to identify the cellular response. One Freestyle valve, explanted for mitral valve endocarditis on the fifth postoperative day, was excluded from analysis. Average implant duration was 52.8 +/- 35.5 months. Four valves were explanted for infective endocarditis, three for aortic insufficiency, two for aortic stenosis with cusp calcification seen in five valves, pannus and thrombus in all valves and a chronic inflammatory reaction involving the xenograft arterial wall seen in eight of nine valves. This was associated with significant damage to the porcine aortic wall in seven cases, and cusp myocardial shelf damage in six cases. Conclusions: In this series of valves, we found (1) infective endocarditis; (2) pannus, thrombus, and calcification; and (3) unusual and significant inflammatory reaction and aortic tissue damage, which could by itself lead to aortic incompetence. (C) 2007 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

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