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The Journal of Thoracic and Cardiovascular Surgery, Vol 95, 658-667, Copyright © 1988 by The American Association for Thoracic Surgery and The Western Thoracic Surgical Association
D Lindblom
The results of 1753 consecutive aortic valve replacements performed during
a 15-year period (1969 to June 1983) are reported. All patients received
one of five models of the Bjork-Shiley valve. The follow-up was 99.6%
complete and covered 10,658 patient-years (mean 6.4 years). An autopsy was
performed in 72% of all fatalities. Early mortality was 5.5%. The early
mortality rate for patients undergoing isolated, elective aortic valve
replacement between 1979 and 1983 was 2.3%. Five- , 10-, and 15-year
actuarial survival rates (early mortality excluded) were 85%, 70%, and 54%,
respectively, and complication-free survival rates at the same time
intervals were 78%, 59%, and 42%. Eighteen percent of the late deaths were
considered valve related. Anticoagulant- related hemorrhage was the single
most common valve-related complication (1.4/100 patient-years) and the most
common valve-related cause of death (0.3/100 patient-years). The incidences
of embolism and valve thrombosis were closely related to the efficacy of
the anticoagulant program. Fourteen of 19 valve thromboses occurred among
180 patients without anticoagulants. The incidences of embolism and valve
thrombosis among 1573 patients with continuous anticoagulant treatment were
0.7 and 0.06/100 patient-years, respectively. Six strut fractures occurred,
all in convexo-concave valves. There was no mechanical failure among the
Monostrut valves. The incidence of "prosthetic failure" (ie, valve-related
complications [not leakage] necessitating reoperation or causing the
patient's death) was 0.6/100 patient-years. The incidence of embolism and
prosthetic failure was similar for the different valve models, and these
long-term results might therefore be considered representative for all
Bjork-Shiley aortic valves.
ARTICLES
Long-term clinical results after aortic valve replacement with the Bjork-Shiley prosthesis
Department of Thoracic Surgery, Karolinska Hospital, Stockholm, Sweden.
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