Aortic stenosis
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Critical

Anesthetic relevance
Anesthetic management

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Specialty

Cardiology

Signs and symptoms

Decreased exercise tolerance, dyspnea, syncope, chest pain

Diagnosis

Echocardiogram

Treatment

Valve replacement surgery

Aortic stenosis is the narrowing of the outflow tract of the left ventricle due to calcification of the aortic valve.

Anesthetic implications

Preoperative optimization

Asymptomatic aortic stenosis may be initially detected on physical exam. Peripheral pulses may be weak and late (sometimes called pulsus parvus et tardus). A loud systolic crescendo-decrescendo murmur may also be present, which is best heard at the right upper sternal border at the 2nd intercostal space. This murmur may also radiate to the carotid arteries.

Patients with suspected aortic stenosis should undergo Transthoracic echocardiogram to confirm the diagnosis and evaluate the severity of the disease. For severe disease, valve replacement therapy should be considered prior to proceeding with elective surgery.

Intraoperative management

Monitoring
Hemodynamics
  • Hypotension should be avoided to preserve afterload (i.e. coronary perfusion pressure). Treat with afterload-increasing agents such as phenylephrine.
  • Bradycardia should be avoided as these patients are often heart rate dependent to preserve adequate cardiac output. A heart rate of 60-90 bpm is optimal.
  • Tachycardia and hypertension should be avoided to preserve left ventricular diastolic filling and reduce myocardial oxygen demand. Treat with increasing anesthetic depth or short-acting beta-blockade with esmolol.
Neuraxial anesthesia

Neuraxial anesthesia is contraindicated in all but mild disease due to the risk of decreased systemic vascular resistance leading to decreased diastolic blood pressure and reduced myocardial perfusion

Postoperative management

Related surgical procedures

Pathophysiology

In aortic stenosis, the opening of the aortic valve is narrowed, typically due to calcification from tissue damage over time. The most common cause is valve degeneration in older patients, though stenosis may develop in younger patients with a bicuspid aortic valve. It is thought that stenosis results from inflammation due to endothelial cell damage from increased mechanical stress.

As aortic stenosis progresses, higher pressures must be generated by the left ventricle to maintain cardiac output. This initially leads to the development of concentric left ventricular hypertrophy. In later stages of the disease, the left ventricle dilates and the ventricular walls thin, resulting in reduced systolic function.

Signs and symptoms

Diagnosis

Treatment

Medication

Prognosis

Epidemiology