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- Dec 5, 2020
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Dr. Hodges is a surgeon at Northwestern Medicine. I found his presentation very well put together- excellent use of data and references and well communicated.
In my view, the entire hour long presentation is well worth the watch, but here is a timeline for some of his points:
3:00 - Start of Dr. Hodges presentation
8:00- Discussion of symptoms of heart valve disease
8:47- Presentation of the Eugene Braunwald graph, showing the cliff of survival if one does not get surgery once symptoms present. I have often posted this graph on the forum.
10:42- Data presented showing the stratification of long term outcomes, depending on severity of symptoms. This data makes a compelling case to getting surgery early vs late and not waiting until symptoms worsen. Later in the presentation, he actually makes the case for getting surgery before symptoms, once a patient becomes severe, particularly for low risk patients. There is growing evidence for this, which he presents well.
21:25- Discusses the issue of patients who are not sure if they have symptoms, slowing down and stress test echos- aka treadmill echos.
27:45 - Blood test for serum BNP levels. A blood test which is a marker for stress in the Left Ventricle.
29:20 - Atrial fibrillation. Discussion of how valve disease can cause afib. Also, the case for treating afib with Maze Procedure during OHS for surgical valve replacement, with data presented showing significant better outcomes when this is done.
40:20- More data supporting getting valve surgery done early, for those who are severe, especially those who are low risk surgical candidates. The numbers are striking when comparing outcomes for early surgery vs conservative care, which is sometimes called "watch and wait".
46:14- discussion for the new change to the American Heart Association guidelines supporting early intervention for mitral valve repair.
48:00- Presentation of data supporting the importance of getting mitral valve surgery done at an experienced high volume center.
My biggest take away is the urgency of not delaying surgery once a patient becomes severe with symptoms, which would apply to both aortic stenosis and regurgitation. Also, the emerging evidence that early intervention leads to much better long term outcomes. To be clear, early intervention does not mean operating when a patient is in the mild or moderate level. It would generally mean the patient is severe, but not waiting for symptoms, or getting surgery soon after symptoms present.
In my view, the entire hour long presentation is well worth the watch, but here is a timeline for some of his points:
3:00 - Start of Dr. Hodges presentation
8:00- Discussion of symptoms of heart valve disease
8:47- Presentation of the Eugene Braunwald graph, showing the cliff of survival if one does not get surgery once symptoms present. I have often posted this graph on the forum.
10:42- Data presented showing the stratification of long term outcomes, depending on severity of symptoms. This data makes a compelling case to getting surgery early vs late and not waiting until symptoms worsen. Later in the presentation, he actually makes the case for getting surgery before symptoms, once a patient becomes severe, particularly for low risk patients. There is growing evidence for this, which he presents well.
21:25- Discusses the issue of patients who are not sure if they have symptoms, slowing down and stress test echos- aka treadmill echos.
27:45 - Blood test for serum BNP levels. A blood test which is a marker for stress in the Left Ventricle.
29:20 - Atrial fibrillation. Discussion of how valve disease can cause afib. Also, the case for treating afib with Maze Procedure during OHS for surgical valve replacement, with data presented showing significant better outcomes when this is done.
40:20- More data supporting getting valve surgery done early, for those who are severe, especially those who are low risk surgical candidates. The numbers are striking when comparing outcomes for early surgery vs conservative care, which is sometimes called "watch and wait".
46:14- discussion for the new change to the American Heart Association guidelines supporting early intervention for mitral valve repair.
48:00- Presentation of data supporting the importance of getting mitral valve surgery done at an experienced high volume center.
My biggest take away is the urgency of not delaying surgery once a patient becomes severe with symptoms, which would apply to both aortic stenosis and regurgitation. Also, the emerging evidence that early intervention leads to much better long term outcomes. To be clear, early intervention does not mean operating when a patient is in the mild or moderate level. It would generally mean the patient is severe, but not waiting for symptoms, or getting surgery soon after symptoms present.