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Prevalence and characteristics of intracranial microemboli signals in patients with different types of prosthetic cardiac valves. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • This study investigates the presence and characteristics of microembolic signals in patients with different types of prosthetic cardiac valves using transcranial Doppler.
  • The study analyzed 179 patients with various prosthetic valves and found that those with Björk-Shiley valves had a significantly higher prevalence and number of embolic signals compared to Medtronic-Hall and Carpentier-Edwards valves.
  • Interestingly, the research found no correlation between the number of embolic signals and any clinical parameters, and control subjects without prosthetic valves showed no embolic signals at all.

Article Abstract

Background And Purpose: Transcranial Doppler detection of microemboli is widely described, but there is no clear evidence of the clinical significance or nature of the embolic material in vivo. Thromboembolism is a major cause of morbidity in patients with prosthetic cardiac valves. We undertook this study to evaluate the prevalence and the acoustic characteristics of microembolic signals in three groups of patients with different prosthetic valves.

Methods: One hundred seventy-nine patients with prosthetic cardiac valves (85 Björk-Shiley, 56 Medtronic-Hall, and 38 Carpentier-Edwards) and 25 normal subjects were examined using transcranial Doppler. Monitoring time was 30 minutes over the right middle cerebral artery.

Results: The prevalence and numbers of embolic signals were significantly higher in patients with Björk-Shiley compared with those with Medtronic-Hall and Carpentier-Edwards valves (89% versus 50% and 53%, respectively; P < .001, chi 2; 156 [112, 204] versus 2 [1, 4] and 2 [1, 4] signals/h, respectively; median [95% nonparametric confidence interval], both P < .001, multiple comparisons, Bonferroni correction). The signal intensity was significantly higher in patients with Björk-Shiley and Medtronic-Hall valves than patients with Carpentier-Edwards valves (2435 [2345, 2527] and 2120 [1745, 2483] versus 225 [184, 287] power units, median [95% confidence interval], both P < .001). No correlation was found between embolic signal numbers and clinical parameters including history of neurological deficit, cardiac rhythm, duration of artificial valve, previous cardiac operations, or intensity of anticoagulation. Embolic signals were not detected in any of the control subjects.

Conclusions: Our data showed that the prevalence, quantity, and acoustic characteristics of Doppler embolic signals differ in patients having three different types of prosthetic heart valves. However, no correlation with clinical parameters was identified.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1161/01.str.25.3.587DOI Listing

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