Abstract
Low gradient aortic stenoses (AS) represent a special challenge for physicians with respect to an exact diagnosis and optimal therapy. The difficulty lies in the estimation of the severity of AS which is decisive for subsequent treatment and the prognosis. Low flow and low gradient can be due to systolic or diastolic dysfunction by high-grade as well as by medium-grade AS and be of non-valvular origin. The latter group is to be interpreted as pseudoaortic stenosis as long as the low flow can successfully be raised by interventional means. However, only patients in the first group can be expected to profit from valve replacement and for patients in the second group the accompanying diseases must be the focus of therapeutic treatment. Therefore, according to recent European surveys up to 30% of patients with severe AS are undertreated due to false estimation of the severity of stenosis and perioperative risk stratification. Furthermore, follow-up investigations have shown that patients with low flow/low gradient stenosis and borderline-normal ejection fraction (EF) are in an advanced stage of the disease because they have often developed a severe reduction in longitudinal myocardial function and in addition have pronounced myocardial replacement fibrosis due to cardiac remodelling despite a preserved EF. Therefore, aortic valve area, mean pressure gradient and EF alone cannot be taken into consideration for the management of patients with severe AS but a comprehensive assessment of the hemodynamics, such as stroke volume, special functional parameters as well as individual clinical appearance is essential for precise diagnostic and therapeutic decision making.
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