Surgical approach
- Access and setup
- Median sternotomy for most open valve surgery; occasionally minimally invasive (right mini-thoracotomy/partial sternotomy) for AVR/MVR in selected patients
- Aortic and right atrial (bicaval if MV/TV) cannulation for cardiopulmonary bypass (CPB); systemic heparinisation
- Aortic cross-clamp; cardioplegia (antegrade/retrograde) for myocardial protection; venting (LV vent via RSPV/PA) as needed
- Aortic valve surgery (SAVR)
- Aortotomy; excision of native valve; annular debridement ± annular enlargement; implantation of mechanical or bioprosthetic valve
- Root/ascending aorta procedures may be combined (e.g., Bentall, root replacement) in aortopathy/endocarditis
- Mitral valve surgery (repair/replacement)
- Left atriotomy (or trans-septal); repair preferred when feasible (annuloplasty ring, leaflet resection, chordal replacement) or replacement
- May include AF surgery (MAZE) and left atrial appendage closure
- Tricuspid/pulmonary valve surgery
- Often concomitant with left-sided surgery; tricuspid repair (annuloplasty) common; replacement less common
- Pulmonary valve replacement in congenital/redo settings; may be on/off CPB depending on approach
- Transcatheter options (context)
- TAVI (usually transfemoral; alternatives: trans-subclavian, transaortic, transapical)
- Transcatheter edge-to-edge mitral repair (e.g., MitraClip) and valve-in-valve procedures in selected patients
Anaesthetic management (headline)
- Type of anaesthesia and airway
- Open valve surgery: General anaesthesia with endotracheal tube; lung isolation rarely required unless thoracotomy/minimally invasive approach (consider DLT/bronchial blocker)
- TAVI: GA with ETT or monitored anaesthesia care (MAC) with sedation depending on centre/patient; GA favours TOE and controlled ventilation
- Duration and pain
- Open single-valve surgery typically ~3–6 h (longer if redo, combined procedures, complex repair, endocarditis)
- Sternotomy pain: moderate–severe initially; multimodal analgesia ± regional fascial plane blocks (parasternal/pectointercostal, erector spinae) and opioid-sparing strategies
- TAVI/TEER: usually low–moderate pain (groin access); shorter case (often 1–2.5 h)
- Monitoring and access
- Standard monitoring
- Large-bore IV access
- Arterial line pre-induction (radial; consider femoral if severe AS/poor pulses)
- BIS monitor
- Central venous access (asleep)
- Temperature
- Urine output
- TOE for open valve surgery (and many TAVI / mitral interventions):
- Pre-CPB diagnosis, guidance of cannula, de-airing, post-repair assessment
- Consider pulmonary artery catheter in severe pulmonary HTN/RV dysfunction/complex cases
- Cardiopulmonary bypass considerations
- Anticoagulation:
- Heparin to ACT target (local protocol):
- Typically give: 300–400 units/kg IV heparin
- Target ACT: 480 seconds (for CPB)
- ACT should be done 3-5 mins after heparin administration
- Vigilance for heparin resistance (AT deficiency)
- Suspect if inadequate ACT rise despite appropriate dosing
- Consider additional heparin ± antithrombin concentrate / FFP
- Protamine reversal:
- Dose of ~1 mg per 100 units of heparin given
- Adjust depending on time since heparin administration and ACT
- Typical max initial dose often ≤ 300 mg (varies by centre)
- Some centres have ACT-guided or protamine titration calculators
- Dose of ~1 mg per 100 units of heparin given
- Heparin to ACT target (local protocol):
- Myocardial protection, ventilation strategy, glycaemic control, temperature management, transfusion/haemostasis plan
- Anticoagulation:
- Postoperative destination
- ICU/HDU; aim for early extubation if stable; anticipate pacing needs, inotropes/vasopressors, bleeding, arrhythmias
Indications and common procedures
- Aortic stenosis: symptomatic severe AS, LV dysfunction, very severe AS, or when undergoing other cardiac surgery
- Aortic regurgitation: symptoms, LV dilatation/dysfunction, acute severe AR (e.g., endocarditis/dissection)
- Mitral regurgitation: symptomatic severe MR, LV dysfunction/dilatation, new AF/pulmonary HTN; repair preferred in degenerative MR
- Mitral stenosis: symptomatic severe MS, pulmonary HTN, recurrent emboli; consider percutaneous balloon valvotomy if suitable
- Tricuspid regurgitation: severe TR with symptoms/RV dilatation, often concomitant with left-sided surgery
- Redo valve surgery: prosthetic degeneration, paravalvular leak, endocarditis, thrombosis; higher risk (adhesions, bleeding, myocardial injury)
Preoperative assessment
- History/examination: symptoms (angina, syncope, dyspnoea), exercise tolerance, heart failure signs, arrhythmia (AF), embolic events, infective endocarditis features
- Echocardiography essentials: valve lesion severity, LV/RV function, pulmonary pressures, other valve disease, aortic root/ascending aorta, presence of vegetations/thrombus
- Severe AS: high gradient/velocity and/or low-flow low-gradient with reduced EF; assess valve area and stroke volume index
- MR: mechanism (degenerative vs functional), severity, suitability for repair
- Coronary disease: angiography/CTCA as indicated; plan for concomitant CABG
- Anticoagulation/antiplatelets: mechanical valves (warfarin), AF, recent stent; plan interruption/bridging; check INR and bleeding risk
- Endocarditis: blood cultures, antibiotics timing, embolic risk, conduction abnormalities, potential for abscess; anticipate friable tissue and bleeding
- Comorbidity and frailty: renal dysfunction, COPD, cerebrovascular disease, carotid disease, anaemia, diabetes; risk scoring (EuroSCORE II) informs but does not replace judgement
Lesion-specific haemodynamic goals
- Aortic stenosis
- Maintain sinus rhythm and adequate preload; avoid tachycardia and significant bradycardia; maintain afterload (coronary perfusion) and treat hypotension promptly (e.g., phenylephrine/noradrenaline)
- Induction: slow, titrated; avoid vasodilation and myocardial depression; consider etomidate/ketamine-opioid techniques depending on patient
- Aortic regurgitation
- Faster heart rate (reduce diastolic time), avoid bradycardia; reduce afterload to promote forward flow; maintain contractility; avoid excessive SVR
- Mitral stenosis
- Avoid tachycardia (diastolic filling time), maintain sinus rhythm, cautious fluids (pulmonary oedema risk), avoid increases in PVR (hypoxia, hypercarbia, acidosis, pain)
- AF with fast ventricular response can precipitate failure: plan rate control and cardioversion strategy
- Mitral regurgitation
- Avoid bradycardia; modestly reduced afterload; maintain preload but avoid overload; maintain contractility; vasodilators/inodilators may help
- Tricuspid regurgitation / RV dysfunction / pulmonary HTN
- Maintain RV perfusion (avoid hypotension), optimise preload (often narrow window), reduce PVR, maintain sinus rhythm/AV synchrony; consider inhaled pulmonary vasodilators (NO/prostacyclin) in severe cases
Intraoperative conduct (open valve surgery)
- Induction and maintenance
- Pre-induction arterial line; consider vasopressor ready (phenylephrine/noradrenaline) especially in severe AS/MS/PHTN
- Balanced GA with opioid + hypnotic + muscle relaxant; volatile or TIVA; avoid large swings in SVR/HR; ensure adequate depth before sternotomy
- TOE workflow
- Pre-CPB: confirm lesion, ventricular function, volume status, other pathology (PFO, thrombus, atheroma), baseline gradients/regurgitation
- Post-CPB: assess prosthesis function (leaflet motion, gradients, regurgitation), repair adequacy, LV/RV function, regional wall motion, pericardial effusion, de-airing
- CPB and separation
- Before CPB: ensure ACT target achieved; antibiotics; glycaemic and temperature plan; discuss cardioplegia strategy and venting
- Separation: optimise preload, rhythm (pacing wires), ventilation and acid-base, electrolytes (K/Mg/Ca), haemoglobin; choose vasopressor/inotrope based on physiology (LV vs RV failure, vasoplegia)
- Haemostasis and transfusion
- Antifibrinolytic (e.g., tranexamic acid) per protocol; monitor coagulation (TEG/ROTEM if available); manage hypofibrinogenaemia/platelet dysfunction; consider cell salvage
- Protamine reversal: give slowly; watch for hypotension, pulmonary vasoconstriction, anaphylactoid reactions; consider risk in prior protamine exposure, fish allergy (association debated), vasectomy, NPH insulin
Postoperative care and complications
- Common early issues: bleeding/tamponade, low cardiac output syndrome, vasoplegia, arrhythmias (AF, heart block), respiratory failure, AKI, delirium/stroke
- Pacing and conduction problems
- AVR/TAVI can cause new LBBB/complete heart block; temporary pacing wires in open surgery; anticipate need for permanent pacemaker particularly after TAVI
- Anticoagulation after valve intervention (principles; follow local/cardiology guidance)
- Mechanical valves: lifelong VKA (warfarin) with target INR depending on valve type/position and risk factors; bridging may be required perioperatively
- Bioprosthetic valves: antiplatelet and/or short course anticoagulation may be used depending on position and patient factors (e.g., AF)
- Prosthetic valve complications
- Thrombosis, pannus, endocarditis, structural valve degeneration (bioprosthesis), paravalvular leak, patient–prosthesis mismatch (high gradients)
You are asked to anaesthetise a patient with severe symptomatic aortic stenosis for surgical AVR. How will you conduct induction and why?
Aim: avoid hypotension/tachycardia, preserve coronary perfusion and diastolic filling, maintain sinus rhythm and preload.
- Preparation: arterial line before induction; large-bore IV access; vasopressor infusion/boluses drawn up (phenylephrine/noradrenaline); defib/pacing available; discuss with surgeon about rapid sternotomy if collapse
- Induction: slow titration of hypnotic with opioid; consider etomidate or ketamine-opioid technique in poor LV reserve; avoid large propofol bolus; gentle positive pressure ventilation to avoid venous return drop
- Targets: maintain SR, HR ~60–80 (avoid tachy/brady), maintain SVR/MAP; treat hypotension immediately (alpha-agonist/NA) and address depth/volume
- Maintenance: stable anaesthesia, avoid neuraxial techniques that cause sympathectomy; ensure adequate analgesia before sternotomy; early TOE assessment
How do haemodynamic goals differ between aortic stenosis and aortic regurgitation?
Key differences: AS needs maintained afterload and controlled HR; AR benefits from reduced afterload and slightly higher HR.
- Aortic stenosis: maintain preload and afterload; avoid tachycardia (↓ diastolic time/coronary perfusion) and avoid profound bradycardia (↓ CO); maintain sinus rhythm; treat hypotension with vasoconstrictors
- Aortic regurgitation: avoid bradycardia (↑ regurgitant volume); aim for higher-normal HR; reduce afterload to promote forward flow; maintain contractility; avoid excessive SVR
A patient with severe mitral stenosis and AF is coming for MVR. What are your main anaesthetic priorities?
MS is a fixed inflow obstruction: tachycardia and raised PVR precipitate pulmonary oedema and RV failure.
- Heart rate/rhythm: avoid tachycardia; aim for rate control; maintain sinus rhythm if possible; plan for cardioversion if unstable; avoid sympathetic surges (laryngoscopy, sternotomy, pain)
- Preload: cautious fluids—enough for LV filling but avoid pulmonary congestion; use TOE and filling pressures to guide
- Pulmonary vascular resistance: avoid hypoxia, hypercarbia, acidosis, high airway pressures; consider pulmonary vasodilators if severe PHTN/RV dysfunction
- Anticoagulation: AF often anticoagulated; check INR/bridging; consider LA thrombus risk (TOE)
What are the key TOE assessments after valve replacement/repair before leaving theatre?
Confirm function, exclude complications, and provide haemodynamic explanation for instability.
- Prosthesis/repair: leaflet/disc motion; transvalvular gradients (consider flow dependence); regurgitation (central vs paravalvular); effective orifice area; for MV repair check residual MR and stenosis (mean gradient)
- Ventricles: LV/RV systolic function, regional wall motion (ischaemia/air embolism), LVOT obstruction (esp. after MV repair)
- De-airing: residual intracardiac air (LA/LV/aortic root); ensure adequate de-airing manoeuvres before closure
- Other: pericardial effusion/tamponade, aortic dissection, pleural collections; confirm no new shunt (PFO) if relevant
Describe causes of difficulty separating from CPB after valve surgery and how you would manage them.
Use a structured approach: preload, pump function, rhythm, afterload, lungs, surgical issues, metabolic factors.
- Preload/ventricular filling: hypovolaemia, inadequate venous return, tamponade; assess with TOE and surgical field; give volume, correct tamponade/bleeding
- Myocardial dysfunction: ischaemia, inadequate cardioplegia, air/coronary embolism, stunned myocardium; treat with inotropes (dobutamine/adrenaline), optimise perfusion pressure, consider IABP/ECMO
- RV failure/PHTN: high PVR, RV ischaemia, residual TR; manage with oxygenation/ventilation, reduce PVR, inotropes (dobutamine/milrinone), inhaled NO/prostacyclin, maintain systemic pressure for RV perfusion
- Rhythm/conduction: AF, junctional rhythm, heart block (esp. AVR/TAVI); use pacing wires, correct electrolytes (K/Mg/Ca), consider amiodarone
- Afterload problems: vasoplegia (low SVR) vs excessive SVR; treat vasoplegia with noradrenaline/vasopressin ± methylene blue per protocol; avoid over-vasoconstriction in MR/AR
- Surgical/valve issues: paravalvular leak, prosthesis malfunction, LVOT obstruction, residual severe regurgitation/stenosis; diagnose with TOE and return to CPB if needed
A patient becomes hypotensive shortly after protamine. What are the differential diagnoses and immediate management?
Think: protamine reaction, bleeding, tamponade, myocardial dysfunction, anaphylaxis, pulmonary vasoconstriction/RV failure.
- Immediate actions: call for help; stop/slow protamine; 100% oxygen; check rhythm; ensure adequate ventilation; confirm arterial trace; assess surgical field and TOE
- Protamine reactions: systemic hypotension (vasodilation), anaphylactoid/anaphylaxis, pulmonary hypertension with RV failure; treat with vasopressors (noradrenaline/adrenaline), fluids cautiously, consider returning to CPB if severe
- Other causes: bleeding/hypovolaemia, tamponade, LV dysfunction/ischaemia, air embolism; manage cause-specific (re-explore, volume/blood, inotropes, de-airing)
Outline anaesthetic considerations for TAVI compared with surgical AVR.
TAVI patients are often older/frailer with severe AS; key risks are vascular complications, stroke, conduction block, and haemodynamic collapse during deployment.
- Anaesthetic technique: GA (enables TOE, immobility, controlled ventilation) vs sedation/MAC (potentially faster recovery); decision based on patient, access route, airway, need for TOE, and institutional outcomes
- Monitoring: invasive arterial line; large-bore IV; temporary pacing (rapid pacing during deployment); readiness for conversion to GA/CPB; neurological monitoring and anticoagulation management
- Complications: annular rupture, aortic regurgitation, coronary obstruction, tamponade, vascular bleeding, stroke, heart block; have a plan for immediate resuscitation and escalation
A patient with severe MR is for mitral valve repair. What haemodynamic targets do you aim for pre-CPB and after repair?
MR benefits from forward flow: avoid bradycardia and high afterload; after repair, LV may face higher effective afterload and dysfunction can appear.
- Pre-CPB: maintain slightly higher HR (avoid bradycardia), reduce afterload (avoid hypertension), maintain contractility; avoid excessive preload that worsens pulmonary congestion
- Post-repair: anticipate reduced LV compliance and increased afterload (no low-resistance regurgitant pathway); treat LV dysfunction with inotropes/inodilators and careful afterload management; assess for SAM/LVOT obstruction on TOE
Discuss anticoagulation issues around valve surgery, including mechanical valves and infective endocarditis.
Balance thrombosis risk (mechanical valves/AF) against bleeding risk (surgery/CPB) and neurological risk (endocarditis).
- Mechanical valves: high thrombotic risk if anticoagulation interrupted; plan warfarin cessation and bridging (often with heparin) based on valve type/position and risk factors; ensure INR appropriate on day of surgery
- Endocarditis: anticoagulation decisions are complex (risk of intracranial haemorrhage with mycotic aneurysm/stroke); follow cardiology/surgical guidance; ensure adequate antibiotic therapy and cultures
- Post-op: restart anticoagulation when haemostasis secured; consider interaction with epidural/regional techniques (usually avoided in open cardiac surgery)
A patient develops acute pulmonary oedema and hypotension after mitral valve replacement. What are the possible causes and immediate management?
Think: LV dysfunction, prosthesis dysfunction, LVOT obstruction, acute MR/para-valvular leak, RV failure/PHTN, tamponade, fluid overload.
- Immediate: 100% oxygen, optimise ventilation (PEEP cautiously), secure haemodynamics (vasopressor/inotrope), urgent TOE to diagnose
- Differentials: prosthetic obstruction/malposition, paravalvular leak, residual severe MR, SAM with LVOT obstruction, LV failure/ischaemia, tamponade
- Management: treat cause—return to CPB if structural issue; in LVOT obstruction avoid inotropes/vasodilators, give fluids cautiously and increase afterload; in LV failure use inotropes/inodilators and consider mechanical support
0 comments
Please log in to leave a comment.