Abstract

Forty-one patients underwent valve surgery at our institution based solely on clinical, M-mode echocardiographic, phonocardiographic, and external pulse recording findings without preoperative cardiac catheterization. Patients with clinical evidence of coronary artery disease were excluded from the study. Preoperatively, 83% of the patients were New York Heart Association functional class III or IV. In all patients, the noninvasive evaluation was considered sufficiently diagnostic of the nature and severity of valvular heart disease to allow surgery without preoperative catheterization. In 23 of 41 cases (group 1), cardiac catheterization was not performed due to the patients' unstable hemodynamic condition at the time surgery was being considered. In the remaining 18 patients (group 2), the probability of obtaining data at catheterization that would significantly affect management decisions was thought to be low, thus not justifying the cost and potential morbidity of this procedure. In all cases, the noninvasive diagnosis was corroborated at operation; there were no unexpected findings nor deaths related to incomplete or incorrect diagnoses. Over a followup period of 4.5 ± 1.4 years, no patient experienced signs or symptoms of ischemic heart disease. In selected patients without anginal chest pain syndromes, appropriate and successful valve surgery may be performed on the basis of combined clinical and noninvasive evaluation without the need for cardiac catheterization.

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