Objective: After aortic valve replacement, the effects of a small functional prosthesis on the extent and pattern of regression of Left ventricular hypertrophy and on clinical outcomes may be less significant in older patients with tow cardiac output requirements. The objective of this study was therefore to determine whether patient-prosthesis mismatch affects left ventricular mass regression in the elderly. Methods: The population studied was made up of 88 patients over 65 years of age with pure aortic stenosis who underwent mechanical aortic valve replacement. The effective orifice area index was calculated for each patient on the basis of the projected prosthesis in vivo effective orifice area. It was considered a continuous variable an...
Abstract Although a small percentage of patients with critical aortic stenosis do not develop left v...
Background: Prosthesis-patient mismatch (PPM) has been linked to reduced long-term survival after ao...
BACKGROUND AND AIM OF THE STUDY: To evaluate the influence of patient-prosthesis mismatch (PPM) on s...
ObjectivesWe examined the role of prosthesis–patient mismatch on left ventricular mass regression af...
Aims Mortality and left ventricular mass (LVM) recovery/regression after aortic valve replacement in...
ObjectiveThe effect of prosthesis–patient mismatch on clinical outcome and left ventricular mass reg...
BACKGROUND: The impact of a valve prosthesis-patient size mismatch is still controversial. In most s...
Background: The impact of valve prosthesis-patient mismatch on long-term outcome after aortic valve ...
Objectives : This study was designed to evaluate the effect of valve prosthesis-patient mismatch (PP...
Contains fulltext : 167867.pdf (publisher's version ) (Closed access)BACKGROUND: T...
Objective: The present study investigated the outcomes of aortic valve replacement with 17-mm mech...
Objectives: The influence of prosthesis–patient mismatch on outcome after aortic valve replacement i...
Objective: Stentless biologic aortic valves are less obstructive than stented biologic or mechanical...
The aim of this study was to evaluate the factors that determine the course of left ventricular mass...
Abstract Although a small percentage of patients with critical aortic stenosis do not develop left v...
Background: Prosthesis-patient mismatch (PPM) has been linked to reduced long-term survival after ao...
BACKGROUND AND AIM OF THE STUDY: To evaluate the influence of patient-prosthesis mismatch (PPM) on s...
ObjectivesWe examined the role of prosthesis–patient mismatch on left ventricular mass regression af...
Aims Mortality and left ventricular mass (LVM) recovery/regression after aortic valve replacement in...
ObjectiveThe effect of prosthesis–patient mismatch on clinical outcome and left ventricular mass reg...
BACKGROUND: The impact of a valve prosthesis-patient size mismatch is still controversial. In most s...
Background: The impact of valve prosthesis-patient mismatch on long-term outcome after aortic valve ...
Objectives : This study was designed to evaluate the effect of valve prosthesis-patient mismatch (PP...
Contains fulltext : 167867.pdf (publisher's version ) (Closed access)BACKGROUND: T...
Objective: The present study investigated the outcomes of aortic valve replacement with 17-mm mech...
Objectives: The influence of prosthesis–patient mismatch on outcome after aortic valve replacement i...
Objective: Stentless biologic aortic valves are less obstructive than stented biologic or mechanical...
The aim of this study was to evaluate the factors that determine the course of left ventricular mass...
Abstract Although a small percentage of patients with critical aortic stenosis do not develop left v...
Background: Prosthesis-patient mismatch (PPM) has been linked to reduced long-term survival after ao...
BACKGROUND AND AIM OF THE STUDY: To evaluate the influence of patient-prosthesis mismatch (PPM) on s...