Minimally invasive heart valve surgery: already established in clinical routine?

Expert Rev Cardiovasc Ther

University Hospital Ulm, Department of Cardiac Surgery, Steinhoevelstr. 9, 89070 Ulm, Germany.

Published: November 2004

Cardiac valve replacement with the need for open heart surgery still has the highest morbidity and mortality rates among routine cardiac surgery, with the exception of aortic aneurysm repair and surgery for congenital heart defects. Reducing invasiveness is a desirable goal, and different strategies and approaches have been used to achieve this with valve repair or replacement less invasive. Despite the good results reported with minimally invasive techniques, time on extracorporal circulation is always longer compared with the conventional procedures. Since these techniques do not reduce real invasiveness but rather improve the cosmetic results, minimal-access surgery would be a better nomenclature. With the exception of patients at a high risk for sternal infections or redo heart operations, a reduction in postoperative morbidity by the avoidance of a median sternotomy is not yet definitely proven. Meanwhile, most surgeons comply with the demand for minimally invasive surgery posed by patients by reducing the length of the incision in aortic valve replacement and by using a right anterolateral approach with a limited incision for mitral valve operations. However, the use of endoscopic or robotic devices is limited to a few centers, and has not yet found its way into clinical routine. Nonetheless, minimally invasive or minimal-access surgery is now established in many centers, and patients should always be informed of these techniques. When this information is provided objectively and patient selection is carried out accurately, these alternative approaches can help to improve postoperative convalescence.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1586/14779072.2.6.837DOI Listing

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