Late Migration of a Paravalvular Leak Closure Device: Emergency Percutaneous Retrieval and Subsequent Successful Leak Closure in a Patient with Cardiogenic Shock and Multiorgan Failure
2020
Paravalvular leak (PVL) is a serious complication of surgical valve replacement, often affecting elderly, multimorbid, high-risk patients. The risk of surgical intervention is often prohibitive in these cases, and so percutaneous PVL closure emerged as a feasible and effective management strategy, with a low complication rate. Specific devices for closure of PVL's are currently not widely available, and so PVLs are closed using generic vascular closure devices, which may result in residual paravalvular regurgitation or even closure device displacement. Although rare, late displacement of the closure device with prosthetic impingement can be life threatening, requiring urgent intervention.We present a case of a seventy-year-old gentleman with rheumatic heart disease and multiple previous mechanical aortic and mitral valve replacements. After repeated admissions for decompensated heart failure, secondary to paravalvular mitral regurgitation, a percutaneous paravalvular leak closure was performed with successful reduction of the leak. He represented 30 days later with cardiogenic shock and multiorgan failure secondary to torrential central mitral regurgitation caused by late displacement of the closure device with mitral prosthesis impingement. Due to an excessively high surgical risk, his case was successfully managed percutaneously with retrieval of the displaced device and closure of the PVL using two Amplatzer Vascular Plug III devices. At the six-month review, he remains asymptomatic.Percutaneous PVL closure is an effective strategy for patients with prohibitive surgical risk. Late closure device displacement can be a life-threatening complication. Our case demonstrates that percutaneous management of this complication is feasible even in patients presenting in extremis.
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