Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
2940819 JACC: Cardiovascular Interventions 2012 11 Pages PDF
Abstract

ObjectivesThis study sought to investigate pulsatile changes of the aortic annulus and their impact on prosthesis selection by computed tomography (CT).BackgroundPrecise noninvasive prosthesis sizing is a prerequisite for transcatheter aortic valve replacement.MethodsA total of 110 patients with severe aortic stenosis (mean age: 82.9 ± 8 years, mean aortic valve area: 0.69 ± 0.18 cm2) underwent electrocardiogram-gated CT. Aortic annulus dimensions were planimetrically quantified as area-derived diameter (DA = 2 ×✓(CSA/π), where CSA is the cross-sectional area) and perimeter-derived diameter (DP = P/π, where P is the length of the perimeter) in 5% increments of the RR interval. Hypothetical prosthesis sizing was based on DA and DP (23-mm prosthesis for <22 mm; 26 mm: 22 to 25 mm; 29 mm: >25 mm) and compared between maximum and traditional cardiac CT reconstruction phases at 35% and 75% of RR. Agreement for prosthesis selection was calculated by κ statistics.ResultsDA and DP were increased and eccentricity was reduced during systole, with DA-MAX and DP-MAX most often observed at 20% of RR. DP was consistently larger than DA. Average net differences were 2.0 ± 0.6 mm and 1.7 ± 0.5 mm by DA-MIN versus DA-MAX and DP-MIN versus DP-MAX. Agreement for prosthesis sizing was found in 93 of 110 patients (κ = 0.75) by DA-75% and in 80 of 110 patients (κ = 0.53) by DA-MAX compared with DA-35%; and in 94 of 110 patients (κ = 0.73) by DP-75% and in 93 of 110 patients (κ = 0.73) by DP-MAX compared with DP-35%. With sizing by DA-75% or DP-75%, nominal prosthesis diameter was smaller than DA-MAX or DP-MAX in 15 and 6 patients respectively.ConclusionsAortic annulus morphology exhibits conformational pulsatile changes throughout the cardiac cycle due to deformation and stretch. These changes affect prosthesis selection. Prosthesis selection by diastolic perimeter- or area-derived dimensions harbors the risk of undersizing.

Related Topics
Health Sciences Medicine and Dentistry Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine
Authors
, , , , , , , , , ,