Bilateral multiple stroke, left upper extremity ischemia, and transient complete atrioventricular block in transcatheter aortic valve implantation: a case report

During TAVI, as the delivery catheter system passed through the aortic valve and the position was being adjusted, CAVB occurred, left radial ABP dropped, the waveform of the pulse oximeter attached to the left hand disappeared, and BIS and bilateral cerebral rSO2 decreased. After TAVI, left upper extremity ischemia and bilateral multiple cerebral embolisms were revealed. We considered that these events may have occurred through a unitary mechanism.

TAVI has been widely performed and is becoming safer, but the incidence of postoperative stroke has not decreased. This may be related to characteristics specific to patients with severe AS. It has been reported that patients who experience TAVI-related stroke tend to be female, have a history of stroke, and have peripheral vascular disease, ischemic heart disease, or renal failure [8]. Our case also had many of these characteristics.

TAVI involves manipulation of the calcified aortic valve and aortic wall by using a delivery catheter system, pre-dilatation, positioning and implantation of the prosthetic valve, and post-dilatation. Therefore, detachment of fragments of the calcified native valve and the aorta may occur, leading to cerebral embolism [9]. One study with transcranial Doppler in TAVI showed that cerebral embolism often occurs during prosthetic valve positioning and valve deployment [10]. Aortic valve calcium score, measured by CT, has been reported to be an independent risk factor for TAVI-related stroke [11]. Our case had a high aortic valve calcium score of 3140 Agatston units, suggesting that the patient was at a high risk of stroke. Calcification of the left ventricular outflow tract and calcification of the aortic arch have also been reported as predictive factors for TAVI-related stroke [12, 13]. Conversely, it has also been reported that calcification of the aortic valve predicted an increase of white matter hyperintensity volume, while calcification of the aortic arch and calcification of the left ventricular outflow tract are not associated with an increase in white matter hyperintensity volume after TAVI [14].

In our case, calcified lesions were observed in the aortic valve, aortic arch, and descending aorta, but cerebral emboli occurred bilaterally in the cerebrum and cerebellum. Therefore, we believe that the source of the embolism might have been located more proximally than the first branch of the aortic arch, that is, the emboli were calcified lesions of the aortic valve.

In TAVI, a calcified aortic valve can embolize organs other than the brain. Considering that calcified lesions disperse to the arch branch, it is quite conceivable that emboli disperse from the subclavian artery to the upper extremity arteries and cause embolism. However, there has been only one case report of a calcified lesion of the aortic valve causing limb arterial embolism [15]. In our case, left radial arterial pressure decreased, and the pulse wave of the pulse oximeter attached to the left hand weakened during surgery, and left-hand ischemia was revealed postoperatively. It is thought that the detachment of the aortic valve lesion caused left upper extremity embolism in the same way as the cerebral embolism. Since the attenuation of the radial arterial pressure improved during the operation, upper extremity angiography was not performed. The left-hand ischemia was fortunately resolved without intervention, but imaging studies would be necessary for a definitive diagnosis and treatment.

CAVB can occur in TAVI mainly because the prosthetic valve physically impairs the conduction system, but transient CAVB can also occur when the left ventricular wire crosses the aortic valve [16]. The incidence of postoperative pacemaker implantation is as high as 3.8–25.9% [1,2,3,4,5,6], and there are various predictive factors for pacemaker implantation including preoperative conduction disturbances, use of self-expandable valves, and depth of valve placement [17]. However, in this case, the timing of CAVB was not after deployment of the prosthetic valve but during valve position adjustment. Considering that the calcified lesion of the aortic valve caused cerebral and upper extremity embolisms, CAVB may also have been an embolism caused by dispersal of calcified debris, with embolism to the atrioventricular branch of the right coronary artery. While abnormal findings were not detected in ST-T of ECG, TTE, and coronary angiography during the events, ST-T depression in II, III, and aVF was observed on the postoperative day 1. In addition, high-sensitive troponin T was increased on postoperative day 1 compared to preoperative value (hsTnT: 0.0212 to 0.348 μg/mL). Those results suggest that right coronary artery ischemia, which might have been caused by dispersal of calcified debris from valve lesions, occurred intraoperatively.

As far as we have investigated, we have not found any reports of CAVB due to embolism from valve lesions, but it is important to assume that possibility.

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