TAVR in patients with hip fracture and severe aortic stenosis: how and when?
Carlo RostagnoGiorgia FalchettiAndrea Carlo RostagnoAlessio MattesiniPublished in: Internal and emergency medicine (2021)
Comorbidities are common in elderly patients with hip fracture and are associated with an increased mortality after surgery. Internal medicine/geriatric leaded multidisciplinary hip fracture teams may play a pivotal role in the clinical management of complex patients. Treatment strategy is particular relevant in patients with severe aortic stenosis that represent more than 5% of patients with hip fracture. These patients have a high in-hospital mortality and poor 1-year survival (less than 50%). Transcatheter aortic valve replacement (TAVR) may be an option in selected patients; however, the choice to treat and, in the case, the timing of valve replacement in relation to hip surgery is highly dependent on clinical conditions before trauma. In this paper, three different scenario of TAVR timing after hip fracture are reported.
Keyphrases
- hip fracture
- aortic stenosis
- ejection fraction
- transcatheter aortic valve replacement
- aortic valve
- aortic valve replacement
- transcatheter aortic valve implantation
- end stage renal disease
- newly diagnosed
- left ventricular
- chronic kidney disease
- coronary artery disease
- cardiovascular disease
- prognostic factors
- mitral valve
- minimally invasive
- type diabetes
- cardiovascular events