Abstract

HighlightsTranscatheter aortic valve replacement is an innovative trend in modern cardiovascular surgery. This minimally invasive image-guided endovascular technology is becoming more and more safe, nowadays it can involve a minimalistic approach in which the aortic valve replacement is performed without incisions, anesthesia and cardiopulmonary bypass - patients are conscious and spontaneously breathing. The article describes a paradigm shift in modern cardiology, in which the concept of treating patients with degenerative aortic valve stenosis has changed over the 20 years of existence of the transcatheter replacement, starting as a method used only in small number of extremely high-risk patients unsuitable for cardiac surgery and now being the most prevalent treatment modality in patients at intermediate and even low surgical risk. The main clinical and technical principles of transcatheter aortic valve replacement, as well as the prospects for the development of this technique, are highlighted. Abstract Transcatheter aortic valve replacement technique was first implemented about 20 years ago, in April 2002. A quarter of a century ago, specialists involved in image-guided surgery would have never believed that they would perform transcatheter interventions on heart valves. Transcatheter interventions are an alternative to open-heart surgery for acquired heart disease. Transcatheter heart valve replacement or repeat transcatheter aortic valve replacement, which do not require incisions, cardiopulmonary bypass, and in some cases general anesthesia, to this day continue to be perceived as revolutionary and breakthrough, saving the lives of many patients. The article presents the main milestones in the development of image-guided endovascular surgery and transcatheter aortic valve replacement technique, the number of which in the United States and several European countries increases by 10–15% annually, reaching hundreds of thousands per year. The etiology and pathophysiology of aortic stenosis, the technique of transcatheter aortic valve replacement and the outcome of this promising minimally invasive procedure are presented.

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