Eight months after the TAVI procedure, she was readmitted to our hospital with palpitation, dyspnea and angina which are indicative of congestive heart failure and fever. Transthoracic echocardiography revealed dysfunction of the aortic device with a mean gradient of 38 mmHg. The patient’s prophylactic antimicrobial medication was then adjusted (ampicillin/ sulbactam, gentamycin, rifampin) because of a positive blood culture for Enterococcus faecium. In addition, transesophageal echocardiography (TEE) showed a 1.2x1.1 cm vegetation on the right coronary cusp of the aortic valve with pericardial effusion measuring approximately 1.5 cm at the posterior region with an EF of 40% and moderate tricuspid regurgitation. On follow-up in the intensive care unit (ICU), the patient was intubated due to acute lung edema and acidosis. Furthermore, dialysis was required for a short period for supervening acute renal failure. After being followed up for approximately one month in the cardiology ICU, the blood cultures were negative. However, the patient’s general condition did not recover, and control TEE did not reveal any reduction in the vegetation size or a decrease in the aortic valve gradient, so she was scheduled for an operation to remove and replace the infected and malfunctioning TAVI valve.
During the surgery, cardiopulmonary bypass (CPB) was first established in a standard fashion, and myocardial protection was obtained via antegrade and retrograde cold blood cardioplegia. The vegetations were present on all of the TAVI valve leaflets, and the valve along with the metal stent and the native aortic valve were meticulously resected (Figure 1). Decalcification was needed for the remaining tissue. Next, a 21 mm Carpentier-Edwards PERIMOUNT Magna aortic heart valve (Edwards Lifesciences, Irvine, CA, USA) was reimplanted (Figure 2). The CPB was then terminated uneventfully with a moderate dose of inotropic support; however, it became necessary to insert an intraaortic balloon pump (IABP) in the ICU because of hemodynamic instability and rhythm disturbances. Afterwards, we detected refractory hypotension and ventricular fibrillation in the patient that led to the need for an emergency reoperation. Resternotomy revealed weak right ventricular contractions and a saphenous vein graft (SVG) anastomosis was performed to the RCA assuming RCA stent failure. The CPB was then terminated with inotropic and IABP support. However, the hemodynamic instability continued, and the patient was lost at the 10th postoperative hour in spite of all our supportive efforts.
The timing of the surgery also should be discussed with different outcomes in the literature. Wilbring et al.[6] reported that immediate cardiac surgery for a patient with a large root abscess caused causing a covered rupture of the aortic base leading to had a poor clinical course. As in our patient, a high risk surgery as a salvage procedure because of the unhealed medical status of the patient despite maximal medical management also exhibited a poor outcome. Furthermore, a recent report by Eisen et al.[8] concluded that infective endocarditis after the TAVI procedure deserves prompt diagnosis and treatment.
Another crucial point is that most TAVI procedures are performed in cath labs. Because the sterilization guides are not as strict as they are in the operating theaters, further studies are needed to evaluate whether cath labs are safe enough to perform the TAVI procedure. In fact, one report exists which showed that cath labs were not associated with increased infective complications in a single-center experience.[9] Nevertheless, we believe that the optimal setting for TAVI procedures should be a hybrid operating room because a high-efficiency, particulate air-filtered laminar flow is absent in most cath labs and the criteria for air control, room facilities, and specific staff education are not as stringent.[9] Thus, hybrid operating rooms should be constituted being the best option to minimize procedure-related infections in these high-risk patients unless the cath labs are modified to improve their standard of quality.
Even though infective endocarditis after TAVI has a very low incidence rate, the optimal patient management associated with this procedure still needs to be evaluated, and we believe that individual patient experiences will help establish the most appropriate treatment plan. To the best of our knowledge, this is the first reported case of TAVI valve infective endocarditis in Turkey; hence further reports would help to identify the incidence rate in our country and the optimal management strategy for these highly vulnerable patients as well as the most advantageous surgical setting. Finally, forming a data pool in Turkey for TAVI patients should be of the utmost importance in order to clarify the exact results of TAVI procedures.
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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