Aortic Stenosis: Determinants of Progression, Severity and Left Ventricular Remodeling
Aortic Valve StenosisAortic stenosis (AS) is the most frequent valvulopathy in Western countries. The prevalence of AS is constantly increasing due to the aging of the population. Although significant progress has been made in understanding the pathophysiological mechanisms underlying the onset and progression of AS, there is no medical treatment to slow or prevent its progression. The only treatment available is Aortic Valve Replacement (AVR) performed by surgery or by catheterization (TAVI). AS is associated with an increase of post-load which leads the left ventricular myocardium to hypertrophy. Associated with hypertrophy, myocardial fibrosis will gradually develop. Despite interesting data, many unknowns persist and remain to be identified. The aim of the study is to evaluate prospectively the progression and impact of AS in 500 patients using clinical, biological, echocardiographic and MRI parameters performed annually.
Early Surgery Versus Conventional Treatment in Very Severe Aortic Stenosis
Aortic StenosisThe optimal timing of surgical intervention remains controversial in asymptomatic patients with very severe aortic stenosis. The investigators therefore try to compare long-term clinical outcomes of early surgery with those of conventional treatment strategy in a prospective randomized trial.
Near INfrared Spectroscopy in Aortic valvE ReplacemenT
Aortic Valve StenosisTranscatheter Aortic Valve Implantation1 moreTranscatheter aortic valve implantation (TAVI) is an alternative for patients, that are considered to be too sick for conventional aortic valve replacement. There is no conclusive opinion about the best anesthesiologic management of these patients. Sedation and general anaesthesia are both adequate and the current literature shows no benefit towards one of these methods. This study wants to investigate the influence of these two anesthesiologic managements on the cerebral oxygen saturation during the "rapid pacing"-period during valvuloplasty. The patients are randomised allocated to one of these two anaesthesiological managements. The investigators use the Near-Infrared Spectroscopy (NIRS) to measure the cerebral oxygen saturation. Parallel there will be a measurement of cerebral biomarkers to monitor cerebral hypoxia.
Remote Ischemic Preconditioning in Aortic Valve Surgery
Aortic Valve StenosisRIP-VALVE is a randomized, single blinded study that will test the hypothesis that remote ischemic preconditioning initiated before surgery reduces post-operative myocardial damage in aortic valve surgery. Infarct size will be determined by 72 hours area under curve of troponin-I.
Vitamin K Supplement for Inhibition of the Progress in Aortic Valve Calcification
Aortic Valve CalcificationIn this mono-center,open,three-armes, controlled, randomized phase I study the progress of aortic valve calcification with and without vitamin K supplementation will be investgated. This will be done by means of measurements of concentrations from osteocalcine and MPG in blood serum, echocardiography, cardiac computed tomography and cardiac MRI
CoreValve Evolut Pro Prospective Registry
Aortic StenosisThe primary objective of this study is to evaluate the real-world performance of the CoreValve Evolut PRO transcatheter aortic valve, including leaflet function, in a prospective observational registry.
TAVR Without Predilatation
Aortic StenosisThe procedure is performed via transfemoral or transcaprotid access; Patients were confirmed to be eligible for TAVR by a multidisciplinary heart team including at least an interventional cardiologist, a cardiothoracic surgeon and an anesthetist. All TAVR implantation procedures were performed with the Edwards SAPIEN 3 THV or the MEDTRONIC CoreValve EVOLUT . For all patients, both vascular access and aortic valve were evaluated before the procedure by multislice computerized tomographic angiography (MSCT) of the entire aorta using vascular windows settings. The prosthesis and the vascular access were left to the discretion of the operating team. Transfemoral access was the first choice when possible. All TAVR procedures were performed in the same hybrid room (in Montpellier University Hospital), Most TAVR were performed under sedation or general anesthesia using mild low profile 14-16 French delivery systems and using percutaneous or surgical vascular access.
TAVI Protocol - Paravertebral Block Study
Aortic Valve ReplacementAortic StenosisTrans-apical aortic valve replacement is a new treatment for severe aortic stenosis. It is offered to elderly patients with medical problems that would markedly increase the risk of conventional cardiac surgery. The rate of delirium (acute confusional state) after surgery in these patients may exceed 50%. Estimated hospital costs associated with delirium at Toronto General Hospital last year exceeded $1-million CAD. Pain after surgery and the use of opioids (morphine type of pain-relief drugs) are known to increase the risk of delirium. The investigators plan to minimize the use of opioids and improve pain management by replacing the standard intravenous opioid-based pain management with the paravertebral nerve block using only the local anesthetic. These two management strategies will be compared with respect to the rate of delirium, duration of hospital stay, and the overall costs. Hypothesis: Paravertebral analgesia with LA decreases the incidence of delirium after trans-apical AVR when compared to standard systemic opioid-based analgesia.
PREVAIL-TF: Transfemoral Placement of Aortic Balloon Expandable Transcatheter Valves Trial (Europe)...
Aortic Valve StenosisA single arm, prospective multicenter non-randomized confirmatory clinical trial evaluating the Edwards SAPIEN XT™ transcatheter heart valve (model 9300TFX; "study valve"), its transfemoral delivery system, and crimper accessories. The trial includes a premarket confirmatory cohort to evaluate the system performance as well as a Post Market Clinical Follow-up phase involving expanded enrollment and long-term follow-up of all patients to evaluate valve performance out to 5 years.
Indication of Permanent Cardiac Parcing After Tanscatheter Aortic Valve Implantation
Aortic Valve StenosisSince 2002, transcatheter aortic valve implantation (TAVI) has resulted in a dramatic change in the prognosis of patients with aortic valve stenosis illegible to surgery. However, this intervention may induce heavy conduction disorder due to the proximity of the aortic annulus and the conduction pathways. So far, there is no clear recommandation for clinical management of conduction disorder after TAVI. Standard criterion cannot be applied due to the multiple comorbidity factors observed in these patients. As described in conventional aortic valve surgery, a degree of inflammation and ischemia of the conduction pathways may be involved in the first days. This is the reason underlying the systematic implantation of epicardial electrodes. Such temporary back-up pacing is not possible in TAVI patients. The primary end-point of this study is to confirm that standard criterion for pacing are reliable in post-TAVI conduction disorders and to analyze the contribution of a systematic electrophysiological study (EPS). In TAVI patients, indications for pacing were persistent high-degree atrioventricular block (AVB) or bundle branch block appearance associated to HV interval longer than 70ms, 24 hours after the procedure. After a two-month follow-up, clinical and ECG evaluation and 24-hour holter monitoring will be realized in patients without pacemaker and compared to data obtained from the devices in pacemaker-implanted patients (% of ventricular pacing > 1% ; presence of more than 1 AVB episod).