Aortic valve disease is a type of heart valve disease. In this condition, the valve between the lower left heart chamber and the body's main artery doesn't work properly.
The aortic valve helps keep blood flowing in the correct direction through the heart. A damaged or diseased aortic valve can affect blood flow to the rest of the heart and body.
Aortic valve disease includes:
A person may be born with aortic valve disease. This is called a congenital heart defect. Sometimes aortic valve disease occurs later in life due to other health conditions.
Treatment for aortic valve disease depends on the type and severity of disease. Some people may need surgery to repair or replace the aortic valve.
Some people with aortic valve disease may not notice symptoms for many years. Symptoms of aortic valve disease may include:
If you're having sudden chest pain, call 911 or your local emergency number.
Make an appointment for a health checkup if you have symptoms of aortic valve disease, such as shortness of breath, fatigue after activity, or sensations of a pounding or an irregular heartbeat. Sometimes the first symptoms of aortic valve disease are related to heart failure. Get a health checkup if you have fatigue that doesn't get better with rest, shortness of breath, and swollen ankles and feet, which are common symptoms of heart failure.
Aortic valve disease may be caused by a heart problem present at birth, called a congenital heart defect. Other causes of aortic valve disease later in life include:
To better understand the causes of aortic valve disease, it may be helpful to know how the heart valves typically work.
The heart has four valves that keep blood flowing in the correct direction. These valves are:
Each valve has flaps, also called cusps or leaflets, that open and close once during each heartbeat.
In aortic valve disease, the valve between the lower left heart chamber and the body's main artery doesn't work properly. The lower left heart chamber is called the left ventricle. The body's main artery is called the aorta.
The valve may become thick and stiff or the valve may not close properly.
Many things can raise the risk of aortic valve disease, including:
Potential complications of aortic valve disease may include:
Proper diagnosis and treatment can help reduce the risk of complications.
To diagnose aortic valve disease, a health care professional examines you and asks questions about your symptoms and medical history.
A whooshing sound, called a heart murmur, may be heard when listening to the heart with a stethoscope. If so, you may need to see a doctor trained in heart diseases, called a cardiologist.
Tests to diagnose aortic valve disease include:
Echocardiogram. An echocardiogram uses sound waves to create pictures of the beating heart. It shows how blood flows through the heart and heart valves. It can help determine the severity of aortic valve disease.
There are different types of echocardiograms. The type you have depends on the information your health care team needs. A standard echocardiogram is done from outside the body. The ultrasound device is gently pressed against the skin of the chest above the heart. If more details are needed about the heart, a transesophageal echocardiogram may be done. This type creates pictures of the heart from inside the body. The ultrasound device is attached to a tube that goes down your throat and into the esophagus.
After testing confirms a diagnosis of aortic or other heart valve disease, your health care team may tell you the stage of disease. Staging helps determine the most appropriate treatment.
The stage of heart valve disease depends on many things, including symptoms, disease severity, the structure of the valve or valves, and blood flow through the heart and lungs.
Heart valve disease is staged into four basic groups:
Treatment for aortic valve disease depends on:
Treatment may include regular health checkups, lifestyle changes, medicines, or surgery or other procedures. If you have aortic valve disease, consider being evaluated and treated at a medical center with a multidisciplinary team of heart doctors called cardiologists and other care professionals trained and experienced in evaluating and treating heart valve disease.
If aortic valve disease is mild or moderate or if you aren't having symptoms, you may only need regular medical checkups to watch the condition.
Heart-healthy lifestyle changes and medicines may be needed to treat symptoms of aortic valve disease or reduce the risk of complications. For example, medicines may be used to:
Eventually, surgery or a catheter procedure may be needed to repair or replace the diseased aortic valve. Some people with aortic valve disease need surgery even if it's not severe or when it's not causing symptoms.
Surgery to repair or replace an aortic valve is often done with open-heart surgery. Sometimes, the valve can be replaced during minimally invasive heart surgery, which uses smaller incisions than those needed for open-heart surgery, or with a catheter-based procedure.
During aortic valve repair, the surgeon may do one or all of the following:
Aortic valve repair often requires open-heart surgery. However, less invasive options may be available. For example, a catheter procedure may be used to insert a plug or device to repair a leaking replacement aortic valve.
In infants and children with aortic valve stenosis, a less invasive procedure called balloon valvuloplasty may be done to temporarily open a narrowed valve. During this procedure, the doctor inserts a thin, hollow tube into a blood vessel, usually in the groin, and threads it to the heart. A balloon is inflated to widen the valve opening. Then the balloon is deflated and removed. This valve repair procedure also may be done in adults who are too sick for surgery or who are waiting for a valve replacement.
In aortic valve replacement, a surgeon removes the damaged valve and replaces it with a mechanical valve or a valve made from cow, pig or human heart tissue. A tissue valve is called a biological tissue valve.
Sometimes, the aortic valve is replaced with your own lung valve, called a pulmonary valve. Then your pulmonary valve is replaced with a biological lung tissue valve. This more complicated surgery is called the Ross procedure.
You and your health care team will discuss the benefits and risks of each type of valve to choose the best option for you.
Aortic valve replacement typically requires open-heart surgery. Sometimes, surgeons can use a minimally invasive procedure called transcatheter aortic valve replacement (TAVR) to replace a narrowed aortic valve with a biological tissue valve. TAVR uses smaller incisions than those used in open-heart surgery. TAVR may be an option for people at increased risk of heart valve surgery complications.
After diagnosis or treatment of aortic valve disease, you'll need regular health checkups. Your health care team may suggest making heart-healthy lifestyle changes. Try these steps:
If you have aortic valve disease, it's important to talk with a health care professional before becoming pregnant. Careful and regular checkups are needed if you have aortic valve disease during pregnancy. Your health care team can discuss with you which medicines are safe to use during pregnancy. Your health care team also can determine whether valve disease treatment is needed prior to pregnancy.
Health care professionals may recommend that people with severe heart valve disease avoid pregnancy to avoid the risk of complications.
If you have aortic valve disease, here are some steps that may help you manage the condition:
If you think you have aortic valve disease, make an appointment for a health checkup. Here's some information to help you prepare for your appointment.
For aortic valve disease, some basic questions to ask your health care team include:
Don't hesitate to ask other questions you have.
Your health care team is likely to ask you many questions, including: