Title of article :
Clinical performance of biological and mechanical prostheses
Author/Authors :
Guy J. Fradet، نويسنده , , W.R. Eric Jamieson، نويسنده , , James G. Abel، نويسنده , , Samuel V. Lichtenstein، نويسنده , , Robert T. Miyagishima، نويسنده , , Hilton Ling، نويسنده , , G. Frank، نويسنده , , O. Tyers، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 1995
Pages :
6
From page :
453
To page :
458
Abstract :
Prosthetic valve replacement remains the most viable alternative for the treatment of severely diseased heart valves. The cumulative experience of mechanical prostheses and bioprostheses was evaluated for a 10-year performance comparison: Carpentier-Edwards standard porcine bioprosthesis (CE-S), 1,214 operations; Carpentier-Edwards supraannular porcine bioprosthesis (CESAV), 2,489; and mechanical prostheses, 1,364 operations (St. Jude Medical, Carbomedics, Duromedics, and Björk-Shiley Monostrut). The freedom from thromboembolism and hemorrhage at 10 years was 82% for CE-S, 78% for CE-SAV, and 65% for mechanical prostheses (p < 0.05). The relationship existed for major thromboembolism and hemorrhage, 91% (CE-S), 87% (CE-SAV), and 88% (mechanical) (p < 0.05), without clinical relevance. The freedom from structural valve deterioration and valverelated reoperation favored mechanical prostheses (p < 0.05) at 10 years (structural failure: 78% for CE-S, 81% for CE-SAV, and 99% for the mechanical group; reoperation: 74% for CE-S, 76% for CE-SAV, and 88% for mechanical prostheses). The freedom from fatal reoperation was not clinically different: 96% for CE-S, 99% for CE-SAV, and 99% for mechanical prostheses (p < 0.05) at 10 years. The freedom from valve-related mortality was not different (p = not significant) at 10 years: 87% for CE-S; 92% for CE-SAV; and 91% for mechanical. The freedom from permanent impairment or residual morbidity, primarily from thromboembolism, was 95% for CE-S, 92% for CE-SAV, and 95% for mechanical group (p < 0.05) but not clinically relevant. The freedom from overall valverelated complications favored both the bioprostheses groups over the mechanical group; 5-year rates were 86% for CE-S, 84% for CE-SAV, and 73% for mechanical (p < 0.05), the relationship extended to 9 years. There remains differentiating features between bioprostheses and mechanical prostheses at 10 years, but the serious complications of major thromboembolism and hemorrhage, fatal reoperation and valve-related mortality do not differentiate the prostheses types.
Journal title :
The Annals of Thoracic Surgery
Serial Year :
1995
Journal title :
The Annals of Thoracic Surgery
Record number :
612618
Link To Document :
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