Abstract

Double balloon percutaneous transluminal aortic valvuloplasty (PTAV) was performed on 149 patients (76 male (51%), mean age 76 +/- 11 years) whose symptoms included severe congestive heart failure in 127 cases (82%), syncope in 21 (14%) and angina in six (4%). Significant changes (P less than 0.05) in peak systolic (83 +/- 36 to 38 +/- 30 mmHg) and mean gradient (68 +/- 25 to 36 +/- 21 mmHg), and aortic valve area (0.6 +/- 0.2 to 1.0 +/- 0.4 cm2) were achieved in 130/149 patients (87%). Complications included an overall in-hospital mortality of 13%, (10.0% excluding the six deaths occurring in 18 moribund patients), a neurologic deficit incidence of 3%, and surgical arterial entry site repair 3.0% (14/47) of patients. Multivariate analysis identified congestive heart failure (NYHA Class IV), left ventricular ejection fraction, cardiac output and coronary artery disease as independent variables significantly affecting in-hospital mortality. Predictors of poor long-term survival were degree of heart failure, and coronary artery disease. The cumulative probability of survival at 24 months was 52 +/- 5% (excluding non-cardiac deaths, was 66 +/- 3%). Follow-up (mean time: 16 +/- 7 months) of 130 patients discharged alive revealed 41 late deaths (26 cardiac related). Sixty-two patients (70%) were symptomatically improved; 17 patients had symptom recurrence and underwent repeat valvuloplasty, and 10 patients valve replacement. Follow-up catheterization of 18 asymptomatic patients revealed that 11 patients had silently restenosed. These data indicate that aortic valvuloplasty is a palliative therapy for elderly patients, who are poor surgical candidates, with symptomatic calcific aortic stenosis with reasonable clinical success and long-term survival when considering their clinical status, but with a significant restenosis rate.

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