Figure 1: Photograph of operative specimen shows black discoloration of the aortic valve.
The patient recovered uneventfully and he was discharged from the hospital on postoperative day seven. Histopathological examination demonstrated that the valve tissue exhibited calcification, fibromyxoid thickening, and extensive pigmentation. The appearance of the pigment on hematoxylin-eosin stain was gray-brown (Figure 2).
Alkaptonuria is occasionally associated with aortic stenosis but generalized arteriosclerosis and calcification of the heart valves have also been described.[3,4] In general, the severity of the disease progresses after the age of 30 and more rapidly in men than in women.
Generally, the pigment is deposited at the edge and annulus of valves and may lead to degeneration of cells. Other conditions that may have caused valvular heart disease such as age-related calcification of the valves, however our patient had no history of rheumatic fever and endocarditis.
Ochronotic cardiac involvement mainly affects the aortic valve in patients over the age of fifty. In our patient, who was 58 years old, had aortic valve involvement and underwent aortic valve replacement. Over age fifty, involvement of other valves including the mitral and pulmonary valve is common. Although ochronosis is transmitted autosomal recessively, the patients sister had also undergone heart valve surgery due to ochronotic involvement. Therefore, we believe that family members diagnosed with this disease should also be followed up for heart valve disease.
The optimal choice of valve prosthesis in patients with ochronosis is still under debate and there is a lack of research to guide decision-making in these patients. Previous case reports describe the use of both biological and mechanical devices. Alkaptonuria initially affects the cardiovascular system by pigment deposition. As pigmentation intensity increases, the fibrolipid components of atheromatous plaques are affected by degeneration of pigment-laden fibrocytes. Extensive extracellular deposition of pigment occurs in the cusps and valve annulus, which serve as a stimulus for dystrophic and accelerated calcification. Pigment deposition and calcification may accelerate degeneration of the bioprosthetic valve. Gaines and Pai[5] suggested that ochronotic pigment in the aortic valve serves as a stimulus for dystrophic calcification that eventually leads to aortic valve stenosis. Considering the pathophysiology of ochronotic heart valvular disease, the biological valve prosthesis may be exposed to the same process of homogentisic acid deposition and calcification as is native valve tissue, thus adversely affecting longevity of the bioprosthesis. In light of these findings, we believe that mechanical valve replacement is an ideal choice in patients affected with ochronosis.
Cardiac ochronosis is a very rare disease that has a good outcome after surgical intervention. We conclude that, in the short term, either a mechanical or a biological prosthesis is a reasonable option for aortic valve replacement in patients with aortic stenosis secondary to alkaptonuria. Long-term broad-range results are not available because of the rarity of the disease. We would advocate the use of a mechanical prosthesis until that time.
Declaration of conflicting interests
The authors declared no conflicts of interest with respect to
the authorship and/or publication of this article.
Funding
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