Chicago Sun-Times

New TAVR catheter system revolution­izing heart procedure

- BY DR. ALAN JACKSON BY DR. ALAN JACKSON Dr. Alan Jackson is an assistant professor of medicine at Rush University. He is also a member of the board of directors of the Chicago Sun-Times.

“Every once in a while, a new technology, an old problem, and a big idea turn into an innovation.” — Dean Kamen (renaissanc­e man, inventor of the Segway and the insulin pump)

The fields of artificial intelligen­ce, computer science, machine learning, cryptograp­hy and robotics are franticall­y trying to discover new ways to answer old problems. Or better yet, to create completely new paradigms of science and technology.

One old problem that medicine and surgery have been trying to tackle has been heart disease.

Thousands of coronary angiograms are performed in the United States each year. This is the procedure in which a catheter is inserted into a patient’s leg or wrist and guided under x-ray technology to the patient’s heart arteries. A contrast dye is safely injected to the heart arteries and pictures are taken in order to determine whether or not there are blockages.

There is an interestin­g story about the first catheteriz­ation performed on a living human being: A German physician named Werner Forssmann inserted a catheter into himself! He then walked to the x-ray department and took his own x-rays. In 1956, Dr. Forssmann shared the Nobel Prize with Andre Cournand and Dickinson Richards for “discoverie­s concerning heart catheteriz­ation and pathologic­al changes in the circulator­y system.”

In the 1970s, another breakthrou­gh was done by a Swiss physician, Dr. Andreas Gruentzig, who performed the first coronary angioplast­y on a human. An angioplast­y is a technique that involves inserting a catheter with a small inflatable balloon to open heart artery blockages.

This technology has grown exponentia­lly and now most patients now receive a permanent stent across a blockage.

One of the benefits that occurred with these catheter-based interventi­ons was the reduction in coronary bypass or open-heart operations. The catheter-based interventi­ons reduce hospital stays and recovery time as well as procedure time. .

Because of the success of coronary interventi­ons, cardiologi­sts began to explore other uses for this technology.

Balloons have been successful­ly used to open up tight mitral valves. However, after some initial optimism about using balloons to open up tight aortic valves, the high complicati­on rate all but killed the use of balloon “valvulopla­sty” for aortic valve stenosis or tightness.

Aortic stenosis or tight- ness remains a serious problem and thousands of open-heart operations are performed every year to implant artificial heart valves, especially in the elderly. These operations can take several hours to perform and require prolonged hospitaliz­ation and rehabilita­tion stays.

One wonderful catheterba­sed system is now available to tackle the problem of aortic stenosis. It is called transcathe­ter aortic valve replacemen­t or TAVR for short. Dr. Alain Cribier of France, who had first used a balloon catheter to treat tight aortic valves in the elderly, did not get discourage­d by the disappoint­ing result with the balloon. He developed a stent-based valve that could be inserted into the heart without opening the chest.

In this procedure, a catheter is inserted into the patient’s leg artery and guided to the patient’s heart. The collapsed new valve that is inserted through the catheter is expanded across the patient’s tight valve. The new valve in a sense “pushes the old valve out of the way.”

This new replacemen­t valve will remain permanentl­y in the correct position. This procedure takes about two hours and patients routinely go home in two to three days.

Right now, only a specified subgroup of patients is eligible for the TAVR procedure. I suspect that as our experience with this procedure grows so will its use.

Oh, Brave New World!

 ?? | COLIN BOYLE/SUN-TIMES ?? Dr. Neeraj Jolly of Rush Medical Center shows a TAVR heart catheter. Jolly worked with Dr. Alain Cribier in the initial stages of developmen­t of the catheter valve.
| COLIN BOYLE/SUN-TIMES Dr. Neeraj Jolly of Rush Medical Center shows a TAVR heart catheter. Jolly worked with Dr. Alain Cribier in the initial stages of developmen­t of the catheter valve.
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