Abstract

Abstract A 51–year–old male patient returned to our attention due to symptomatic severe aortic stenosis. Despite the severity of the aortic valve disease, he had been previously turned down from aortic valve replacement by us because of lack of symptoms and very unfavorable anatomy. Indeed he had been irradiated at the age of 3 due to Hodgkin’s Lymphoma and presented with porcelain aorta, small ascending aorta and aortic annulus. The patient returned to us with a 3–month history of progressive dyspnea (NYHA class IIa) and one episode of lipothymia during physical exercise. Physical examination, hematologic and biochemical investigations at admission were normal. Our trans–thoracic echocardiogram confirmed a trileaflet aortic valve (AV) that was severely stenotic and calcified with a mean gradient of 60 mmHg and an AV area of 0.5 cm2 (0.3 cm2/m2), in presence of good left ventricular systolic function with an ejection fraction (EF) of 60%. CT excluded coronary disease but, confirmed severe calcified aortic stenosis and porcelain aorta with small calcific sino–tubular junction and ascending aorta and protruding LVOT calcium. (Ascending aorta 19 mm; STJ 19 mm). The heart–team judged the patient not suitable for AVR and decided to perform a high–risk TAVI, leaving apical conduit as the last resort. From a technical standpoint, the LVOT calcium and the short and narrow STJ were high risk features for rupture with balloon expandable devices. On the other hand the short and narrow STJ with the narrow ascending aorta would represent a serious issue for the expansion of self–expanding devices and an even more troublesome feature for future coronary access and coronary occlusion in the setting of TAVI–in–TAVI down the road. Given the patient’s young age, a balloon expandable SAPIEN ultra 23 mm was chosen to be implanted with a two–step inflation to minimize the risk of STJ rupture. The prosthesis was partially expanded until anchoring was achieved on the aortic leaflets then, on continuous pacing, the balloon was rapidly collapsed, pushed down deeper under the STJ and fully inflated to achieve prosthesis’ inflow expansion. Intra–procedural and post–procedural course were uneventful and the patient was discharged home in 5th Day. Transthoracic echocardiogram at the dismission reveal a trans–aortic mean gradient of 18 mmhg, the absence of significant paravalvular leaks and a preserved ejection fraction. Pre–discharge CT scan confirmed feasibility of future TAVI–in–TAVI in case of need.

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