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Chest, Vol 100, 988-990, Copyright © 1991 by American College of Chest Physicians


ARTICLES

Doppler echocardiography in 180 normally functioning St. Jude Medical aortic valve prostheses. Early and late postoperative assessments

EC Perin, BS Jin, CM de Castro, JJ Ferguson and RJ Hall
Department of Adult Cardiology, St. Luke's Episcopal Hospital/Texas Heart Institute, Houston 77225-0345.

Limited Doppler echocardiographic data are available regarding velocities and gradients across normally functioning St. Jude Medical valves in the aortic position. To establish a standard reference for Doppler characteristics of normal aortic St. Jude Medical prostheses, we recorded continuous-wave Doppler measurements of peak and mean velocities and peak and mean gradients in 180 patients with normally functioning St. Jude aortic valves. There were 119 men and 61 women in the study; the mean age was 57 years. Minimal valvular regurgitation was present in 56 patients (31 percent). Velocities and gradients were reported in five patient groups according to valve sizes of 19 mm, 21 mm, 23 mm, 25 mm, and 27 mm; the mean gradients were 16 +/- 6, 16 +/- 6, 14 +/- 5, 12 +/- 5, and 12 +/- 6, respectively. Differences in velocities and gradients among the five valve sizes were not statistically significant (p = 0.05). Velocities and gradients were also analyzed in three patient groups according to time intervals after valve replacement. The first group (n = 64) underwent Doppler evaluation one to seven days postoperatively (mean, six days); the second group (n = 60) was evaluated after 8 to 30 days postoperatively (mean, 12 days); and the third group (n = 56) was evaluated after more than 30 days postoperatively (mean, 691 days). There were no significant differences in measurements for the three groups.





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Copyright © 1991 by the American College of Chest Physicians.