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The treatment of neonates with unrepairable heart valve dysfunction remains an unsolved problem because there are no growing heart valve replacements. Heart valve transplantation is a potential approach to deliver growing heart valve replacements. Therefore, we retrospectively analysed the semilunar valve function of orthotopic heart transplants during rejection episodes.
Methods:
We included children who underwent orthotopic heart transplantation at our institution and experienced at least one episode of rejection between 1/1/2010 and 1/1/2020. Semilunar valve function was analysed using echocardiography at baseline, during rejection and approximately 3 months after rejection.
Results:
Included were a total of 31 episodes of rejection. All patients had either no (27) or trivial (4) aortic insufficiency prior to rejection. One patient developed mild aortic insufficiency during a rejection episode (P = 0.73), and all patients had either no (21) or trivial (7) aortic insufficiency at follow-up (P = 0.40). All patients had mild or less pulmonary insufficiency prior to rejection, which did not significantly change during (P = 0.40) or following rejection (P = 0.35). Similarly, compared to maximum pressure gradients across the valves at baseline, which were trivial, there was no appreciable change in the gradient across the aortic valve during (P = 0.50) or following rejection (P = 0.42), nor was there any meaningful change in the gradient across the pulmonary valve during (P = 0.55) or following rejection (P = 0.91).
Conclusions:
This study demonstrated that there was no echocardiographic evidence of change in semilunar valve function during episodes of rejection in patient with heart transplants. These findings indicate that heart valve transplants require lower levels of immune suppression than orthotopic heart transplants and provide partial foundational evidence to justify future research that will determine whether heart valve transplantation may deliver growing heart valve replacements for children.
This chapter presents a standardized approach to assess the four valves of the heart: the mitral valve (MV); aortic valve; tricuspid valve; pulmonary valve. The MV is examined through four mid-esophageal and two transgastric views. The aortic valve is a semilunar valve with three cusps of similar size. The aortic root is usually easy to visualize with transesophageal echocardiography (TEE) and needs three cross-sections for a complete evaluation. The tricuspid valve consists of three leaflets, attached via multiple chordae tendineae to three small papillary muscles, a supporting annular ring, and a portion of the myocardium of the right ventricular (RV) free wall. The pulmonary valve and the main pulmonary artery can be assessed with TEE in the basal view. The standardized approach outlined in the chapter provides a useful framework for a TEE assessment of the cardiac valves.
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