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Anesthesia for Valvular Heart Surgery

Anesthesia for Valvular Heart Surgery. Charles E. Smith, MD Professor of Anesthesia Director, Cardiothoracic Anesthesia MetroHealth Medical Center Case Western Reserve University. Objectives. Pathophysiology Aortic valve: AS, AI Mitral valve: MS, MR Tricuspid valve: TR Hemodynamic Goals

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Anesthesia for Valvular Heart Surgery

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  1. Anesthesia for Valvular Heart Surgery Charles E. Smith, MD Professor of Anesthesia Director, Cardiothoracic Anesthesia MetroHealth Medical Center Case Western Reserve University

  2. Objectives • Pathophysiology • Aortic valve: AS, AI • Mitral valve: MS, MR • Tricuspid valve: TR • Hemodynamic Goals • Anesthetic management

  3. Aortic Stenosis • May occur at 3 levels: • Valvular • Subvalvular • Supravalvular

  4. Valvular Aortic Stenosis • Calcification + fibrosis of normal tricuspid valve- very common • Calcification + fibrosis of congenital bicuspid AV • Rheumatic- uncommon since antibiotics

  5. Aortic Stenosis • Normal AVA: 2-4 cm2 • Severe AS: AVA < 1cm2 • If normal LV- mean PG > 50 mmHg • If poor LV function- mean PG may be low!

  6. Pathophysiology of Aortic Stenosis • Chronic LV pressure overload • Concentric LVH to ↓ wall stress • LVH → ↓ diastolic compliance, ↓ coronary blood flow + imbalance of MVO2 supply-demand • ↓ diastolic compliance →↑LVEDP + LVEDV • Myocardial ischemia bc LVH, ↑ wall stress, ↓ diastolic coronary perfusion + ↓ coronary flow reserve

  7. Hemodynamic Goals: AS • SR is crucial. Cardiovert SVTs promptly • Optimal HR 60-80. Tachycardia → ischemia + ectopy. Bradycardia → low CO due to fixed SV • Adequate preload essential but difficult to predict bc diastolic dysfunction [TEE useful] • Maintain contractility. Avoid myocardial depressants • Treat hypotension promptly- phenylephrine, volume, Trendelenburg

  8. AS: Considerations • Drugs to maintain CPP: • Phenylephrine • Norepinephrine • Atrial kick – crucial. HR 60-80 preferred • Spinal + epidural anesthesia poorly tolerated if  preload or  HR

  9. AS: Management • Premed: young+ anxious get benzos. Frail + elderly  dose (or avoid) • Intraop: std monitoring + preinduction art line. • Resting HR 60-80. Avoid myocardial depressants • CVP, PAC, TEE- routine for optimal management

  10. AS: Weaning from Bypass • Thick, hypertrophied heart may be difficult to protect- stone heart still occurs (rare) • Noncompliant LV dependent on stable rhythm • Inotropes if preop LV dysfunction • Dynamic subaortic or cavitary obstruction after AVR if septal LVH • Tx w volume, β-blockers. Rarely need myomectomy [inotropes worsen obstruction]

  11. Septal LVH with SAM. Tx= volume + beta-blockers

  12. Aortic Regurgitation: Etiology • Aortic root dilatation- HTN, ascending aorta dissection, cystic medial necrosis, Marfans, syphilitic aortitis, ankylosing spondylitis, osteogenesis imperfecta • Deformed + thickened cusps- rheumatic, IE, bicuspid valve • Cusp prolapse- dissection

  13. Horse kick to upper chest with severe AI. The RCC was torn from the STJ

  14. Pathophysiology: Chronic AR • Asymptomatic for many years • LV volume + pressure overload occurs • LV maintains systolic fct by dilation + ↑ compliance • LV decompensates at later stages w ↑ LVEDP + LVEDV→ CHF, arrhythmias, sudden death

  15. Pathophysiology: Acute AR • LV unable to dilate acutely • LV volume overload occurs • ↑ LVEDP + LVEDV→ acute pulmonary edema • Emergency surgery often needed

  16. Hemodynamic Goals: AR • Optimal HR= 90. • Avoid bradycardia- ↑ regurg • Avoid high afterload • SNP preferred • Acute AR- often need inotropes + vasodilator [epi+ SNP/milrinone] • IABP- contraindicated

  17. Anesthetic Management: AR • Premed w benzos • Routine monitoring: art line, CVP, PAC • TEE beneficial • Narcotic based technique if impaired LV • If acute AR: RSI w ketamine-succinylcholine • Inotropes if acute AR or preop LV dysfunction

  18. Mitral Stenosis • Usually rheumatic- thickening, calcification + fusion of MV leaflets + commissures • May be combined w MR + AR • Surgery if MVA < 1 cm2 w NYHA class III or IV dyspnea [or embolus- LAA clot]

  19. MS- Pathophysiology • Pressure gradient between LA + LV- prevents LV filling • Pulmonary HTN w ↑ LAP • ↑ LAP → LAE, atrial arrhythmias (Afib) • Pulm HTN → RV dysfct, RVE, TR [may need TV repair] • LV dysfct uncommon unless CAD

  20. MS: Hemodynamic Goals • Preserve SR, if present • Avoid tachycardia which ↓ diastolic filling of LV + worsens MS • Avoid factors which worsen pulmonary HTN- hypercarbia, acidosis, hypothermia, sympathetic nervous system activation, hypoxia

  21. Anesthetic Management: MS • Premed: benzos to avoid tachycardia • If pulm HTN- supplemental O2 • Control of HR- β blockers, digoxin, CEB, amiodarone

  22. Intraop Management: MS • Std monitors + CVP, PAC, TEE • PAP underestimates LVEDP + LVEDV • Esmolol: • single most useful drug with severe MS, even if CHF + pulmonary edema • 10-20 mg bolus; 50-100 mcg/kg/min • N2O avoided bc effects on pulm HTN • Panc avoided bc tachycardia

  23. Weaning from Bypass: MS • MV replacement- hemodynamics usually improved bc obstruction to LV filling resolved • If preop pulm HTN + RV dysfct- may need milrinone or nitric oxide

  24. Mitral Regurgitation: Etiology • Myxomatous degeneration (most common) • Ischemic (functional)- papillary muscle dysfunction, annular dilatation, LV dysfct + tethering • Infective endocarditis • Trauma

  25. Papillary muscle rupture after blunt trauma

  26. MR- Pathophysiology • Volume overload of LV→ LVE, LAE • LA can massively dilate • Atrial arrhythmias with LAE • Dilated LV decompensates at later stages w  LVEDV

  27. Chronic MR. Dilated LA w normal LAP

  28. Chronic MR. Dilated LA w normal LAP Acute MR. Small LA with ↑ ↑ LAP+ pulmonary edema

  29. Severity of MR • Pressure gradient between LA + LV • Size of regurgitant orifice (ERO) • Duration of ventricular systole

  30. Hemodynamic Goals- MR: • Vasodilators: NTG, SNP - ↓ afterload + regurgitant fraction + ↑ forward flow • High normal HR to ↑ time of ventricular systole • Maintain contractility

  31. Anesthetic Management MR: • MV repair (v. replacement) • preserved papillary muscle + chordae • enhanced LV function • requires TEE to assess repair • LV dysfct unmasked after MV surgery bc LV cannot offload into LA • May need inotropes + vasodilators

  32. Tricuspid Regurgitation • Primary: rheumatic, IE, carcinoid, Ebstein’s, trauma • Secondary: chronic RV dilatation, often w MV disease

  33. Flail TV after blunt trauma

  34. TR- Pathophysiology • RV + RA overloaded + dilated • RA v compliant so RAP rises only w end stage disease • Pulm HTN due to MV disease- ↑ RV afterload + worsens TR • RVE → paradoxical motion LV septum w imapired LV filling + compliance • Right heart failure: hepatomegaly, ascites

  35. TR- Hemodynamic Goals • If secondary to MV- treat left heart lesion • Avoid pulm HTN + high PVR • Normal to high preload for RV stroke volume • Hypotension treated w inotropes + volume bc vasoconstrictors may worsen pulm HTN

  36. TR- Anesthetic Management • Premed- benzos • Std monitors + art line, CVP, TEE • PAC if pulm HTN + MV pathology; but CO overestimated w severe TR. May be impossible to float Swan • Weaning from CPB: if preop RV dysfunction/ dilation- inotropes, inodilators, vasodilators, nitric oxide

  37. Summary- I • Knowledge of patient + extent of valvular heart disease • Functional + hemodynamic status • Co-morbidities • Planned surgery: cannulation sites, repair vs replacement, minimally invasive vs full bypass. • Inotropes, vasodilators, vasopressors, infusion pumps

  38. Summary- II • Understand pathophysiology of lesions + hemodynamic goals: AS, AR, MS, MR, TR • Monitoring: standard + invasive +TEE • Anesthetic technique: most can be used safely. • Adjustment of dosages more important than adhering to a rigid anesthetic technique.

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