Fig 2: Mono-leaflet mechanical valve leaflet is working at flouroscopy.
Operative procedure
Bilateral common femoral arteries were explored for
femoral arterial cannulation but due to insufficient
size of the femoral arteries, arterial cannulation was
planned through the ascending aorta and a median resternotomy
was achieved by oscillating saw. After dissection
of massive pericardial adhesions, routine aortic
arterial, two-staged venous and aortic vent cannulations
were performed. Systemic cooling down was 29 ºC.
Aortotomy was done and by using selective coronary ostial cannula a small amount of crystalloid cardioplegia
was also administrated to myocardium for better myocardial
protection. Only two sutures were holding the
mechanic aortic valve and massive infection was found
around the valve. The old valve (23 size Medtronic-Hall
(MH) monoleaflet valve) was dissected out and infectious
materials were cleaned up. Following these steps,
aortic mechanical valve replacement was performed
with 25 size St. Jude aortic mechanical valve using oneby-
one suture technique with valve sutures at the noncoronary
cusp passed through from the Teflon-coated
patch-supported adventitial side of the aorta to the
endothelial side. Aortotomy was sutured, systemic
heating up started and weaning from cardiopulmonary
bypass by infusion rate of dopamine 10 μg/kg/min and
dobutamine 10 μg/kg/min. After decannulation and
haemostasis, the patient was transferred to the intensive
care unit (ICU).
Postoperative period
The patient started to wake in the postoperative 2nd
hour and was extubated at the 6th hour. Antibiotic therapy for infectious endocarditis was a combination
of vancomycin, meropenem, gentamycin and rifampicin.
During ICU follow-up hemodynamic parameters
remained stable and normal so the patient was discharged
to the ward from ICU with infusion of dopamine
7.5 μg/kg/min on the second day after operation.
To complete antibiotic treatment against infective endocarditis
the patient was followed up to 40 days after
operation during which time no other complication
developed. During this period no specific microorganism
could be isolated, cultured or demonstrated from
surgical materials or blood culture. The last echocardiography
revealed that new vegetative materials formed
on the prosthetic valve. On the 55th postoperative day,
the patient died because of ischemic emboli which were
most probably septic in origin.
Major dehiscence of a mechanical prosthetic aortic valve due to massive infective endocarditis can result in morbidity or mortality. The literature reports higher operative mortality for prosthetic valve endocarditis ranging from 20 to 30%.[5] E arly detection and collaboration between cardiovascular surgery, cardiology and infectious disease specialists is needed to get better results.
Declaration of conflicting interests
The authors declared no conflicts of interest with respect
to the authorship and/or publication of this article.
Funding
The authors received no financial support for the
research and/or authorship of this article.
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