| UCLA uses new device to replace aortic valve in patients who can't have open-heart surgery | ||
| Date: 08/15/2012 Contact: Rachel Champeau (rchampeau@mednet.ucla.edu) Phone: 310-794-2270 |
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UCLA has performed its first transcatheter aortic valve replacement (TAVR), using a new device approved by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration to replace an aortic valve in a patient who was not a candidate for open-heart surgery.
The aortic valve's leaflets act as sentries to help blood flow from the heart into the aorta while preventing blood from leaking backward into the heart. When the leaflets aren't doing their job properly due to aortic stenosis, the heart needs to generate higher pressure to push the blood through the valve into the aorta. Patients with aortic stenosis have a number of symptoms, including chest pressure or angina, shortness of breath, edema, and fainting. |
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