Out of Pandora's Box - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 63
About This Presentation
Title:

Out of Pandora's Box

Description:

Zeus made Pandora, the first mortal woman, because he was mad at Prometheus who ... When Pandora looked at the bottom of the box, she saw that the only thing left ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:1877
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 64
Provided by: ramikh
Category:
Tags: box | out | pandora

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Out of Pandora's Box


1
Rami Khouzam, MD
Out of Pandora's Box
2
DISCLOSURE
  • The Impossible Dream

3
INDEX CASE
  • 64 y/o WM presented with left- sided CP for 3
    weeks
  • sharp, continuous, radiating down his left arm,
    not exacerbated by exertion
  • NTG SL some relief
  • diaphoresis and palpitations
  • (Similar episode 3 months prior)

4
Past Medical History
  • HTN
  • Diverticulosis, AVMs, Multiple GI bleeds
  • Hyperlipidemia
  • Hypothyroidism
  • Cerebellar stroke1996
  • Fe. Deficiency anemia
  • Aortic insufficiency
  • Atrial fibrillation

5
  • Family History
  • CAD, HTN in father
  • Colon cancer in uncle
  • Social History
  • Tobacco ETOH (), quit after CVA

6
Medications
  • Aspirin 81 mg
  • Plavix 75 mg
  • Ferrous sulfate 325 mg bid
  • Synthroid 0.05 mg
  • Lisinopril 20 mg
  • Nitroglycerin 0.4 mg SL prn
  • Omeprazole 20 mg

7
PE
  • Gen Pale
  • Neck JVD 12 cm
  • CV S1 S2 S4 Irregular irregularity
  • 3/6 early diastolic murmur LSB? apex
  • Lungs Fine bilat. basal crackles
  • Abdom BS
  • Ext Trace edema bilat.

8
Labs (pertinent)
  • HGB 11.8 ?
  • HCT 37.2 ?
  • MCV ?
  • Ferritin ?
  • TIBC ?

9
(No Transcript)
10
  • Dipsesta (3 months earlier)
  • No evidence of ischemia
  • EF 35. Cardiomyopathy
  • Cardiac catheterization
  • Normal coronary arteries
  • Aortic root 3-4 AI

11
  • 2D- Echo
  • Dilated aortic root with moderate to severe
    aortic insufficiency
  • LV Diastole 70 mm
  • TEE
  • Dilated aortic root at the sinuses of Valsalva
    maximun diameter 6.3 cm
  • 3-4 AI
  • Mild global hypokinesis. EF 45-50

12
  • CT of Chest/ Abdomen/ Pelvis
  • Dilated aortic root with ectatic descending
    thoracic and abdominal aorta
  • No ascending aortic aneurysm identified beyond
    the root

13
Aortic Aneurysms
  • Incidence (thoracic) 5.9 per 100,000
    person-years
  • Lifetime probability of rupture 75-80
  • 5-year untreated survival rates 10-20

14
  • Size matters
  • risk of rupture within 1 year
  • ? 6 cm 43
  • ? 8 cm 80

15
PATHOPHYSIOLOGY
  • Aneurysm localized or diffuse aortic dilatation
    50 normal diameter
  • Weakness or defect in the aortic wall
  • Cystic medial degeneration ? progressive
    dilatation
  • Atherosclerosis associated but not enough
  • Other factors CTD

16
CONDITIONS ASSOCIATED WITH ANEURYSMS
  • ADPKD
  • FMD (Fibromuscular Dysplasia)
  • AVM
  • CTD Ehlers-Danlos type IV, Marfans syndrome,
    pseudoxanthoma elasticum
  • Coarctation of the aorta
  • Osler-Weber-Rendu syndrome
  • Bacterial endocarditis

17
SURGICAL TREATMENT
  • Aortic valve or graft replacement or both,
    depends on patient presentation
  • 1970s and 1980s No longer was any portion of the
    aorta beyond reach of the cardiovascular surgeon
  • Cooley, Debakey, and others...

18
  • Michael E. DeBakey, M.D., is the oldest of five
    children born to Lebanese immigrants
  • Born in 1908, in Lake Charles, LA
  • While still a medical student, he devised a pump
    that became one of the essential components of
    the heart-lung machine, which made open-heart
    surgery possible
  • Has performed more than 60,000 cardiovascular
    procedures
  • First to perform successful excision and graft
    replacement of arterial aneurysms

19
  • A pioneer in the development of an artificial
    heart, he was the first to use a heart pump
    successfully in a patient
  • He also conceived the idea of lining a bypass
    pump and its connections with Dacron velour
  • DeBakey is currently working with NASA to develop
    a self-contained, miniaturized artificial heart
  • His DeBakey-Raytheon-ITS telemedicine system uses
    satellites to electronically link remote sites of
    the world to the Texas Medical Center for medical
    training and treatment

20
  • Aortic insufficiency causes
  • A) Damage of the aortic valve leaflets
  • Rheumatic endocarditis
  • Trauma
  • Bicuspid aortic valve
  • Rheumatoid arthritis
  • Myxomatous degeneration
  • Ankylosing spondylitis
  • Marfans syndrome
  • Phenfluramine-phenteramine

21
  • B) Distortion or dilation of the aortic root and
    ascending aorta
  • Aortic root dilatation
  • Systemic hypertension
  • Syphilis
  • Reiters syndrome
  • Ankylosing spondylitis
  • Trauma
  • Dissecting aneurysm
  • Elhers-Danlos syndrome
  • Osteogenesis imperfecta
  • Pseudoxanthoma elasticum
  • Inflammatory bowel disease
  • Annuloaortic ectasia

22
  • Severe valvular lesions...
  • Until the early 1980s ONLY surgery
  • 1985 Percutaneous aortic valvuloplasty (PAV) was
    described by Cribier et al

Circulation, April 2004
23
Results
  • Reduces tight stenosis to moderate
  • final valve area between 0.7 and 1.1 cm2
  • (clearly inferior to a valvular prosthesis
    usually valve area 1.5 cm2)

24
Risks
  • Hospital mortality from 3.5-13.5 within 24
    hours, 20-25 of the patients at least 1 serious
    complication

25
Long-Term Results
  • Benefit decreases and finally disappears after a
    few months
  • It is now recognized that PAV alone does not
    change the natural course of the disease

26
(No Transcript)
27
  • New Frontiers
  • Or
  • New Dead-Ends???

28
(No Transcript)
29
Percutaneous Valve Replacement Repair
  • Mid 1960s first experiments started
  • 1992 Andersen et al
  • porcine bioprosthetic valve attached to a wire
    stent in pigs chest
  • Followed by other animal models

30
(No Transcript)
31
  • 2000 percutaneous pulmonary valve replacement
    started in humans with the report by Bonhoeffer
    et al
  • (bovine jugular vein sutured into a stent)
  • Lutter et al similar experiments with a porcine
    aortic valve mounted into a self-expandable
    nitinol stent

32
  • Satisfactory durability of the devices for a
    period up to 2 years
  • Late 2002 First percutaneous aortic valve
    implantation in humans, performed by Cribier, in
    a 57 yo man with severe aortic stenosis,
    cardiogenic shock and contraindications for
    surgery

33
  • Good valve function AVA 1.6 cm2
  • However, the patient died of severe extracardiac
    complications 4 months later
  • Since then, 6 other such procedures have been
    performed

34
JACC, March 2004
35
  • Prolonged life expectancy, aging population,
    increased number of patients with degenerative
    calcific aortic stenosis
  • who NEED Surgical AVR
  • A subset of patients, elderly with declining
    health status or life-threatening comorbidities
  • AVR too high risk or contraindicated

36
  • Limited therapeutic options
  • ? interest in the development of percutaneously
    delivered bioprosthetic aortic heart valve

37
  • Apr. 2002- Aug. 2003 6 patients 5 males and 1
    female
  • Each patient declined for surgery by cardiac
    surgeon
  • 3 in cardiogenic shock. All in (NYHA) class IV
  • Balloon valvuloplasty previously attempted in 4
    cases

38
(No Transcript)
39
  • Aspirin (160 mg) and Plavix (300 mg) the day
    before the procedure
  • Trans-septal catheterization from the right
    femoral vein, heparin 5,000 IV
  • A 7-F flotation balloon catheter for anterograde
    crossing of the aortic valve

40
  • Transseptal puncture dilated with a 10-mm balloon
    catheter, 23 mm balloon catheter advanced from
    the right femoral vein to predilate the native
    aortic valve
  • Through a 24-F sheath PHV advanced over the wire,
    across the interatrial septum within the stenotic
    native valve

41
(No Transcript)
42
  • In 2 patients, rapid cardiac pacing (200 to 220
    beats/min) of the right ventricle during PHV
    delivery to decrease aortic blood flow and
    prevent the risk of PHV migration during balloon
    inflation
  • Post-procedural treatment included aspirin (160
    mg), plavix (75 mg)
  • No COUMADIN needed

43
(No Transcript)
44
(No Transcript)
45
(No Transcript)
46
  • ? in AVA from 0.49 ? 0.8 cm2 to 1.66 ? 0.13 cm2
    (p
  • ? in transvalvular gradient from 38 ? 11 mm Hg to
    5.6 ? 3.4 mm Hg (p
  • Mean duration of the procedure was 134 ? 23 min.
    Mean fluoroscopy time was 28 ? 14 min

47
Clinical Course
  • Dramatic clinical improvement
  • The initial 3 patients who survived the procedure
    (patients 1, 3 4) died of non-cardiac
    complication at 18, 4 and 2 weeks respectively

48
  • Causes of death
  • complications of leg amputation due to
    long-standing PVD (patient 1)
  • abdominal syndrome (patient 3)
  • hemorrhage from rectal carcinoma (patient 4)
  • The most recent 2 patients were discharged at
    days 12 and 15. Clinically stable at 8 weeks with
    no symptoms of heart failure

49
  • Why the anterograde trans-septal approach?
  • Several advantages over the retrograde approach
    to reach the aortic valve
  • Allows percutaneous insertion of the PHV through
    a 24-F sheath in the femoral vein under local
    anesthesia
  • Eliminates the risk of arterial thrombosis,
    dissection or rupture
  • Offers more predictable valve delivery (since the
    PHV crosses the less diseased myocardial surface
    of the aortic leaflets and is coincident with the
    direction of blood flow)

50
  • AVA 1.7 cm2 obtained in all successful cases
  • 3-fold improvement ? consistently associated
    with a striking early improvement of the left
    ventricular function
  • Results significantly better than those obtained
    after balloon aortic valvuloplasty which rarely
    provides ? in valve area above 0.8 cm2

51
  • Survival Outcome ??
  • In this selected population of severe aortic
    stenosis associated with multiple potentially
    fatal comorbidities, prolonged survival is
    unlikely
  • Paravalvular aortic regurgitation noted in all
    patients post-PHV implantation

52
  • Advantages
  • Bioprosthetic valve with stainless steel stent
  • No NEED for long-term anticoagulation
  • ASA Plavix enough
  • I-REVIVE study Ongoing pilot clinical trial will
    allow further refinement of the technique and
    assessment of short and long-term clinical
    outcomes

53
JACC, March 2004
54
  • The technique that will be adopted by the
    majority of cardiologists has to be
  • Safe
  • Very low risk of mortality morbidity
  • Easy to perform
  • The Valve has to be
  • Ideal
  • Biocompatible with no long-term morbidity
  • Should last preferably for a lifetime but at
    least 7-10 years
  • Expandable (child)
  • Economical

55
  • EXCITING new era for percutaneous cardiac
    intervention
  • If such valves and procedures are proved safe and
    effective
  • Hundreds of thousands of patients with calcific
    aortic stenosis thousands of patients with
    pulmonic insufficiency may benefit
  • ? Maybe alsoAI

56
Conclusions
  • At the present stage, there are more questions
    than answers
  • How can we prevent the obstruction of coronary
    ostia and paravalvular leaks in asymmetric
    calcified orifices?
  • What will be the ideal material?
  • Jugular bovine veins are limited in size, their
    outcome in the systemic circulation is unknown
  • Valves made of polymer or biological material are
    to be designed and evaluated

57
  • Lessons from the past suggest that in this field,
    a close collaboration between interventionists
    and surgeons is of utmost importance
  • First applications of percutaneous aortic valve
    replacement in humans opens a new era for
    research and potential clinical application for
    the percutaneous treatment of acquired valve
    disease

58
  • Zeus made Pandora, the first mortal woman,
    because he was mad at Prometheus who had had
    given the mortals special gifts, so he decided to
    give them one more Pandora
  • Each god gave her something to make her perfect.
    Venus gave her beauty, Mercury gave her
    persuasion, Apollo gave her music, Hephaestus
    gave her voice, Hermes gave her pettiness in her
    tiny brain, etc. Finally she was ready for Earth

59
  • Zeus gave her to Epimetheus (Prometheus' brother)
  • Prometheus had said to Epimetheus not to take
    anything from the Olympians, especially Zeus
  • Epimetheus was about to decline, but as soon as
    he looked at her and saw her beauty, he accepted
    Zeus' gift
  • Epimetheus gave Pandora a box that she was
    forbidden to open

60
  • Every day Pandora wondered what was in the box
  • She knew she mustn't open it, but she was
    extremely curious and could not bear not to know
    its contents
  • As soon as she pulled the cover off, all of the
    evil and mistrust flew out into the world
  • When Pandora looked at the bottom of the box, she
    saw that the only thing left was hope to Comfort
    mankind

61
From a DREAM..
To a REALITY ??
62
(No Transcript)
63
(No Transcript)
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com