Abstract

Records of 1,298 consecutive patients who had received the St. Jude Medical prosthesis were reviewed (713 male and 585 female patients; mean age, 61.79 ± 13.4 years). Early mortality was 5.7% (74 patients). Ninety-three percent complete follow-up was accomplished for the 1,224 patients who left the hospital (4,306.50 patient-years). One hundred ninety-two of these patients died, a late mortality of 16.9%. Sixty-four patients experienced thromboembolic episodes (17 major and 35 permanent). Twenty-four patients had anticoagulant-related bleeding, 4 had valve thrombosis, 7 had prosthetic valve endocarditis, 9 had paravalvular leak, and 10 underwent reoperation. There was no structural valve failure in this series. Twenty-two of the 118 patients who had valve-related complications died; another 15 patients died of sudden and unknown causes. Therefore, the total number of valve-related deaths was 37. Of those patients who survived, New York Heart Association functional class improved significantly (98% in classes II and III preoperatively and 96% in classes I and II postoperatively). Linearized rates for thromboembolism, valve thrombosis, and anticoagulant-related bleeding were 1.49 % ± 0.19 % , 0.09 % ± 0.05 % , and 0.56 % ± 0.11 % / 100 patientyears, respectively. The actuarial estimate of incidence free from all complications, operative death, and valve-related death was 66.9% ± 8.2% at the end of 9 years. In spite of old age and advanced heart disease, the patients who received the St. Jude Medical prosthesis had very good results over a 10-year period.

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