Aortic valve-related aortopathy: assessing optimal timing of surgical intervention
- PMID: 31591904
- DOI: 10.1080/14779072.2019.1675511
Aortic valve-related aortopathy: assessing optimal timing of surgical intervention
Abstract
Introduction: Dilatation of the proximal aorta is often associated with an aortic valve disease (e.g. bicuspid aortic valve, aortic stenosis), so-called 'valve-related aortopathy.' The definition of optimal timing for surgical intervention in valve-related aortopathy remains incompletely clarified. The limited value of traditional diameter-based intervention criteria has been recognized and more sophisticated diagnostic tools are necessary.Areas covered: This article aims to give an overview on the most recent literature addressing the different forms of valve-related aortopathies and the optimal timing of surgical intervention. It highlights the valve morphotype-dependent (BAV vs TAV) and the valve lesion-dependent aortopathies (stenosis vs regurgitation) and outlines the current treatment options of those pathologies. Further, this review discusses novel serological and rheological markers, potentially helping in the decision-making process in valve-related aortopathy. Systematic literature searches were performed using PubMed and Embase up to July 2019.Expert opinion: The combination of serological biomarkers and quantitative rheological markers for transvalvular flow eccentricity might be an additional useful tool. A possible solution for the future could be a risk score which considers body-surface-adjusted aortic diameters, activity of certain circulating biomarkers, transvalvular flow patterns, possible connective tissue disorders, and the valve morphology to define an individualized treatment strategy.
Keywords: Aortopathy; BAV; aortic valve disease; bicuspid aortic valve; rheological biomarkers; serological biomarkers.
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