Abstract

Case: A 65-year-old patient presented 4 months after mitral valve repair (annuloplasty band, commissuroplasty, neo-chordae to the anterior mitral leaflet (AL)). At follow up, he developed significant hemolytic anemia (Hemoglobin 10.1g/dL, LDH 650U/L, Bilirubin 1.4mg/dL and haptoglobin<14 mg/dL). TEE revealed the substrate for hemolysis: moderate-severe mitral regurgitation (MR) starting at the coaptation of A2 and P2 scallops due to AL overriding the posterior (PL). The jet was then directed posteriorly to a small (3 x 6 mm confirmed by cardiac CT) area of annuloplasty band dehiscence at the base of the P2 scallop, with the band in direct path of the flow. The unique feature was that AL retained coaptation with the annuloplasty band, thus forming a small tunnel from the A2-P2 coaptation defect to the dehisced area. Given that redo surgery early after initial intervention would be challenging, the Heart Team decided to pursue percutaneous closure at the level of the dehisced annuloplasty to reduce regurgitation and mitigate hemolysis. Under 3D TEE guidance closure with a 12mm AVP plug was attempted but resulted in interference with PL motion with a new jet of regurgitation laterally. Using two 8mm AVP plugs was successful in closing the dehiscence with minimal impact on PL. Overall regurgitation was reduced to mild. Within a week hemolysis labs improved: LDH337 U/L, Bilirubin0.7 mg/dL. Discussion: Annuloplasty band dehiscence is a known cause of recurrent MR after repair. As regurgitation occurs at the leaflet coaptation zone, percutaneous closure of these defects is usually futile. In this patient we took advantage of the maintained coaptation between the AL and annuloplasty band.

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