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Health Information Heart Procedures - Heart Valve Repair/Replacement Surgery - Page 1

Heart Valve Repair/Replacement Surgery

Overview

Heart valve repair or replacement surgery is a treatment option for valvular heart disease. To better understand how valvular heart disease affects the heart, a review of basic heart anatomy and valve function follows.

Anatomy of the heart, view of the valves
click image to enlarge

The heart is a pump made of muscle tissue. The heart has four pumping chambers: two upper chambers, called atria, and two lower chambers, called ventricles. The right atrium pumps blood into the right ventricle, which then pumps the blood into the lungs where wastes such as carbon dioxide are given off and oxygen and other nutrients are taken into the blood.

From the lungs, the blood flows back into the left atrium, is pumped into the left ventricle, then is pumped through the aorta out to the rest of the body and the coronary arteries. When the atria are pumping, the ventricles are relaxed in order to receive the blood from the atria. Once the atria have pumped their entire blood load into the ventricles, they relax while the ventricles pump the blood out to the lungs and to the rest of the body.

In order to keep the blood flowing forward during its journey through the heart, there are valves between each of the heart's pumping chambers:

  • tricuspid valve - located between the right atrium and the right ventricle.

  • pulmonary (or pulmonic) valve - located between the right ventricle and the pulmonary artery.

  • mitral valve - located between the left atrium and the left ventricle.

  • aortic valve - located between the left ventricle and the aorta.

If the heart valves become damaged or diseased, they may not function properly. Dysfunction of heart valves may be either stenotic (stiff) or insufficient (leaky). When one (or more) valve(s) becomes stiff, or stenotic, the heart muscle must work harder to pump the blood through the valve. Some reasons why heart valves become stenotic include infection (such as rheumatic fever or staph infections) and aging. If one or more valves become leaky, or insufficient, blood leaks backwards, which means that less blood is pumped in the proper direction.

Valvular heart disease can cause the following symptoms:

  • dizziness
  • chest pain
  • breathing difficulties
  • palpitations
  • edema (swelling) of the feet, ankles, or abdomen
  • rapid weight gain due to fluid retention

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