Aortic Root Enlargement of a Small Annulus Using the Nicks Technique During Aortic Valve Replacement

pp. 504-507

Authors

  • Raúl A. Borracci Hospital de Clínicas, School of Medicine, Universidad de Buenos Aires
  • Miguel Rubio Hospital de Clínicas, School of Medicine, Universidad de Buenos Aires
  • Ricardo L. Poveda Camargo Hospital de Clínicas, School of Medicine, Universidad de Buenos Aires
  • Julio Baldi Hospital de Clínicas, School of Medicine, Universidad de Buenos Aires
  • Marcela Archer Hospital de Clínicas, School of Medicine, Universidad de Buenos Aires
  • Carlos Ingino Hospital de Clínicas, School of Medicine, Universidad de Buenos Aires

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.7775/rac.es.v82.i6.4700

Keywords:

Aortic Valve Replacement, Small Aortic Root, Aortic Root Enlargement, Patient-prosthesis Mismatch

Abstract

Background: In patients with aortic stenosis and small aortic annulus, the surgical approach may lead to implantation of an aortic prosthesis without the necessary hemodynamic profile, conditioning the development of patient-prosthesis mismatch. In these cases, aortic root enlargement becomes a necessary procedure.
Objectives: The aim of this study was to describe the incidence of small aortic annulus and the outcomes of aortic root enlargement.
Methods: A total of 305 adults undergoing aortic valve replacement were prospectively studied between 2011 and 2013. Aortic root enlargement was performed in cases of small aortic annulus (< 21 mm) using the Nicks technique.
Results: Aortic root enlargement was required in 7.5% of cases. All these patients were women (p < 0.001) with mean age of 71.1 years. Height (p < 0.001) and body mass index (p < 0.001) were lower in the group with aortic root enlargement, and the procedure lasted 10 to 11 minutes more. Mortality associated with aortic root enlargement was 4.3% (1/23) versus 3.5% in patients not undergoing this procedure (RR 1.23, 95% CI 0.16-9.16; p = 0.584).
Conclusions: One out of every 14 aortic valve replacements required aortic root enlargement. Female gender and small body surface area were associated with the need of enlargement. The Nicks technique can be performed after a short learning curve, without an excessive increase in risk or operative time.

Published

2025-09-09

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