Exercise testing has an established role in the evaluation of patients with valvular heart disease and can aid clinical decision making. Because symptoms may develop slowly and indolently in chronic valve diseases and are often not recognized by patients and their physicians, the symptomatic, blood pressure, and electrocardiographic responses to exercise can help identify patients who would benefit from early valve repair or replacement. In addition, stress echocardiography has emerged as an important component of stress testing in patients with valvular heart disease, with relevant established and potential applications. Stress echocardiography has the advantages of its wide availability, low cost, and versatility for the assessment of disease severity. The versatile applications of stress echocardiography can be tailored to the individual patient with aortic or mitral valve disease , both before and after valve replacement or repair. Hence, exercise-induced changes in valve hemodynam-ics, ventricular function, and pulmonary artery pressure, together with exercise capacity and symptomatic responses to exercise, provide the clinician with diagnostic and prognostic information that can contribute to subsequent clinical decisions. Nevertheless, there is a lack of convincing evidence that the results of stress echo-cardiography lead to clinical decisions that result in better outcomes, and therefore large-scale prospective ran-domized studies focusing on patient outcomes are needed in the future. (J Am
BNP serum level allows to differentiate symptomatic from asymptomatic patients with severe AS. BNP is an independent predictor of outcome in these patients and may be helpful for risk stratification.
In view of the very poor prognosis of unoperated patients, the current operative risk, and the long-term outcome after surgery, AVR is the treatment of choice in the majority of cases of LF/LGAS.
Increased Zva is related to low LVEF and more frequent CR on DSE in LEF/LGAS. However, Zva did not allow an accurate distinction between true and pseudo-severe AS and failed to predict operative and long-term mortality after aortic valve replacement, in LEF/LGAS.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.