Are calcification and oxidative modifications associated with progressive bioprosthetic heart valve dysfunction?
Oxidized amino acid formation, alongside calcification, plays a potentially important role in progressive bioprosthetic heart valve dysfunction leading to reoperation.
BACKGROUND: Bioprosthetic heart valves (BHVs), fabricated from glutaraldehyde-pretreated bovine pericardium or porcine aortic valves, are widely used for the surgical or interventional treatment of heart valve disease. Reoperation becomes increasingly necessary over time because of BHV dysfunction. METHODS AND RESULTS: =0.01) but was not significantly correlated with calcification in non-coronary artery bypass graft explanted BHV. CONCLUSIONS: Both increased BHV leaflet calcium levels and elevated oxidized amino acids were associated with bioprosthesis dysfunction necessitating reoperation; however, BHV calcium levels were not a determinant of implant duration, indicating a potentially important role for oxidized amino acid formation in BHV dysfunction.
Lee et al. (Mon,) studied this question.