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Changes in Right Ventricle Function After Mitral Valve Repair Surgery

Authors :
Garvan C. Kane
Sheng Ying Chung
Sam R. Orde
Richard C. Daly
Jae K. Oh
Sorin V. Pislaru
Hector M. Michelena
John M. Stulak
Juan N. Pulido
Rakesh M. Suri
Source :
Heart, Lung and Circulation. 29:785-792
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
Elsevier BV, 2020.

Abstract

Right ventricular (RV) dysfunction can occur after cardiac surgery and persist for years. We assessed perioperative RV systolic function in patients undergoing mitral valve (MV) repair and further compared minimally invasive robotic-assisted mitral valve repair (MIMVr) vs standard 'open' MV repair (MVr). Speckle tracking (RV free wall strain [RVS]) was used as a sensitive echocardiography method to assess RV function.Retrospective analysis, over 3 years, of consecutive patients (n = 158) referred to Mayo Clinic (Rochester, MN, USA). Preoperative, pre-discharge and 1 year transthoracic echocardiograms were reviewed. A prospective pilot study was performed for sample size estimation. Primary outcome was RV free wall strain (RVS).Right ventricular free wall strain declined after MV repair surgery (-22.6 ± 7% vs -15 ± 6%, p 0.001). There were smaller reductions in RVS in MIMVr vs MVr group (-6.0 ± 9% vs -10.3 ± 8%, p 0.01), which persisted after adjusting for baseline values (RVS treatment effect 1.5%, p = 0.007). There was greater recovery in MIMVr vs MVr group at 1 year follow-up vs pre-surgery values (-3.4 ± 9% vs -8.1 ± 8% respectively, p 0.001, RVS treatment effect 1.7%, p = 0.001). Bypass time was higher in the MIMVr group (80min ± 22 vs 40min ± 20, p 0.0001). The echo findings remained significant correcting for age, pulmonary pressures and change in ejection fraction.Right ventricular systolic dysfunction is common after MV repair surgery. Deterioration in RV contraction is less pronounced following MIMVr vs MVr and is associated with enhanced RV functional recovery at 1 year, albeit not to preoperative levels. This may potentially be associated with clinical functional improvement but further studies are warranted to investigate this.

Details

ISSN :
14439506
Volume :
29
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Heart, Lung and Circulation
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....6c7625f249f85772715682755b585dae
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.hlc.2019.06.724