MINIMALLY INVASIVE CARDIAC SURGERY TO REPLACE TRANSCATHETER IMPLANTED AORTIC BIOPROSTHESIS AFTER EARLY DEGENERATION

CASE REPORT

Authors

  • Larissa Manzan de Alcântara Borges Clínica de Anestesia, Goiânia/GO Author
  • Giulliano Gardenghi Clínica de Anestesia, Goiânia/GO; Hospital ENCORE Author
  • João Alberto Pansani Hospital ENCORE Author
  • Stanlley de Oliveira Loyola Clínica de Anestesia, Goiânia/GO; Hospital ENCORE Author
  • Gustavo Siqueira Elmiro Clínica de Anestesia, Goiânia/GO; Hospital ENCORE Author
  • Artur Henrique de Souza Hospital ENCORE Author

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.37951/2675-5009.2024v4i12.129

Keywords:

POSTOPERATIVE COMPLICATIONS, AORTIC VALVE STENOSIS, THORACIC SURGERY, TRANSCATHETER AORTIC VALVE REPLACEMENT

Abstract

Surgical replacement of a transcatheter implanted aortic valve prosthesis (TAVR) that presented early degeneration (in less than 24 months after its implantation) does not commonly occur in a short period of time and may be related to a worse prognosis and complications. Minimally invasive cardiac surgery can minimize surgical stress in situations where the individual undergoing it is fragile. The purpose of this article is to review the topic and describe a case of a frail 84-year-old patient who presented with valve dysfunction after TAVR and underwent surgical replacement of the bioprosthesis, through minimally invasive surgery.

Published

2024-02-01

How to Cite

Alcântara Borges, L. M. de, Gardenghi, G., Pansani, J. A., Loyola, S. de O., Elmiro, G. S., & Souza, A. H. de. (2024). MINIMALLY INVASIVE CARDIAC SURGERY TO REPLACE TRANSCATHETER IMPLANTED AORTIC BIOPROSTHESIS AFTER EARLY DEGENERATION: CASE REPORT. SCIENTIFIC JOURNAL CEREM-GO, 4(12). https://doi.org/10.37951/2675-5009.2024v4i12.129