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Chest, Vol 83, 632-637, Copyright © 1983 by American College of Chest Physicians
ARTICLES |
J Fernandez, K Chang, A Gooch, GM Lemole and SS Yang
Over 13 years, 96 Beall prostheses (80 Teflon, 16 Pyrolite) explanted at surgery were examined for durability, material wear, and clinical symptoms leading to surgical indication for excision were evaluated. The Teflon valves showed progressive disc wear and notching and two cases of disc escape from the cage; the Pyrolite discs were intact in all prostheses. The Dacron-Velour covering common to both types showed dehiscence at the inlet, significantly more severe after the third implant year in the Teflon (p less than 0.005) than in the Pyrolite prostheses. Sixty-nine (85 percent) cases with Teflon valves showed clinical manifestations of congestive heart failure due to prosthetic dysfunction; in 50 there was significant hemolytic anemia. Seven (44 percent) of the 16 Pyrolite disc valves were excised primarily because of dysfunction. The degree of hemolysis with the Pyrolite valves was usually mild. These data clearly suggested the advisability of early excision of the Beall Teflon prostheses in symptomatic patients and a close follow-up in patients with the Pyrolite models.
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