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Autopsy after transcatheter aortic valve implantation. / van Kesteren, F.; Wiegerinck, E. M. A.; Rizzo, S. et al.

In: Virchows Archiv, Vol. 470, No. 3, 2017, p. 331-339.

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleAcademicpeer-review

Harvard

van Kesteren, F, Wiegerinck, EMA, Rizzo, S, Baan, J, Planken, RN, von der Thüsen, JH, Niessen, HWM, van Oosterhout, MFM, Pucci, A, Thiene, G, Basso, C, Sheppard, MN, Wassilew, K & van der Wal, AC 2017, 'Autopsy after transcatheter aortic valve implantation', Virchows Archiv, vol. 470, no. 3, pp. 331-339. https://doi.org/10.1007/s00428-017-2076-4

APA

van Kesteren, F., Wiegerinck, E. M. A., Rizzo, S., Baan, J., Planken, R. N., von der Thüsen, J. H., Niessen, H. W. M., van Oosterhout, M. F. M., Pucci, A., Thiene, G., Basso, C., Sheppard, M. N., Wassilew, K., & van der Wal, A. C. (2017). Autopsy after transcatheter aortic valve implantation. Virchows Archiv, 470(3), 331-339. https://doi.org/10.1007/s00428-017-2076-4

Vancouver

van Kesteren F, Wiegerinck EMA, Rizzo S, Baan J, Planken RN, von der Thüsen JH et al. Autopsy after transcatheter aortic valve implantation. Virchows Archiv. 2017;470(3):331-339. Epub 2017. doi: 10.1007/s00428-017-2076-4

Author

van Kesteren, F. ; Wiegerinck, E. M. A. ; Rizzo, S. et al. / Autopsy after transcatheter aortic valve implantation. In: Virchows Archiv. 2017 ; Vol. 470, No. 3. pp. 331-339.

BibTeX

@article{a85f044fb924437bbef45664e1bbc427,
title = "Autopsy after transcatheter aortic valve implantation",
abstract = "Autopsy after transcatheter aortic valve implantation (TAVI) is a new field of interest in cardiovascular pathology. To identify the cause of death, it is important to be familiar with specific findings related to the time interval between the procedure and death. We aimed to provide an overview of the autopsy findings in patients with TAVI in their medical history divided by the timing of death with specific interest in the added value of autopsy over a solely clinically determined cause of death. In 8 European centres, 72 cases with autopsy reports were available. Autopsies were divided according to the time interval of death and reports were analysed. In 32 patients who died <= 72 h postprocedure, mortality resulted from cardiogenic or haemorrhagic shock in 62.5 and 34.4%, respectively. In 31 patients with mortality > 72 h to <= 30 days, cardiogenic shock was the cause of death in 51.6% followed by sepsis (22.6%) and respiratory failure (9.7%). Of the nine patients with death > 30 days, 88.9% died of sepsis, caused by infective endocarditis in half of them. At total of 12 patients revealed cerebrovascular complications. Autopsy revealed unexpected findings in 61.1% and resulted in a partly or completely different cause of death as was clinically determined. Autopsy on patients who underwent TAVI reveals specific patterns of cardiovascular pathology that clearly relate to the time interval between TAVI and death and significantly adds to the clinical diagnosis. Our data support the role of autopsy including investigation of the cerebrum in the quickly evolving era of cardiac device technology",
author = "{van Kesteren}, F. and Wiegerinck, {E. M. A.} and S. Rizzo and J. Baan and Planken, {R. N.} and {von der Th{\"u}sen}, {J. H.} and Niessen, {H. W. M.} and {van Oosterhout}, {M. F. M.} and A. Pucci and G. Thiene and C. Basso and Sheppard, {M. N.} and K. Wassilew and {van der Wal}, {A. C.}",
year = "2017",
doi = "10.1007/s00428-017-2076-4",
language = "English",
volume = "470",
pages = "331--339",
journal = "Virchows Archiv",
issn = "0945-6317",
publisher = "Springer Verlag",
number = "3",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Autopsy after transcatheter aortic valve implantation

AU - van Kesteren, F.

AU - Wiegerinck, E. M. A.

AU - Rizzo, S.

AU - Baan, J.

AU - Planken, R. N.

AU - von der Thüsen, J. H.

AU - Niessen, H. W. M.

AU - van Oosterhout, M. F. M.

AU - Pucci, A.

AU - Thiene, G.

AU - Basso, C.

AU - Sheppard, M. N.

AU - Wassilew, K.

AU - van der Wal, A. C.

PY - 2017

Y1 - 2017

N2 - Autopsy after transcatheter aortic valve implantation (TAVI) is a new field of interest in cardiovascular pathology. To identify the cause of death, it is important to be familiar with specific findings related to the time interval between the procedure and death. We aimed to provide an overview of the autopsy findings in patients with TAVI in their medical history divided by the timing of death with specific interest in the added value of autopsy over a solely clinically determined cause of death. In 8 European centres, 72 cases with autopsy reports were available. Autopsies were divided according to the time interval of death and reports were analysed. In 32 patients who died <= 72 h postprocedure, mortality resulted from cardiogenic or haemorrhagic shock in 62.5 and 34.4%, respectively. In 31 patients with mortality > 72 h to <= 30 days, cardiogenic shock was the cause of death in 51.6% followed by sepsis (22.6%) and respiratory failure (9.7%). Of the nine patients with death > 30 days, 88.9% died of sepsis, caused by infective endocarditis in half of them. At total of 12 patients revealed cerebrovascular complications. Autopsy revealed unexpected findings in 61.1% and resulted in a partly or completely different cause of death as was clinically determined. Autopsy on patients who underwent TAVI reveals specific patterns of cardiovascular pathology that clearly relate to the time interval between TAVI and death and significantly adds to the clinical diagnosis. Our data support the role of autopsy including investigation of the cerebrum in the quickly evolving era of cardiac device technology

AB - Autopsy after transcatheter aortic valve implantation (TAVI) is a new field of interest in cardiovascular pathology. To identify the cause of death, it is important to be familiar with specific findings related to the time interval between the procedure and death. We aimed to provide an overview of the autopsy findings in patients with TAVI in their medical history divided by the timing of death with specific interest in the added value of autopsy over a solely clinically determined cause of death. In 8 European centres, 72 cases with autopsy reports were available. Autopsies were divided according to the time interval of death and reports were analysed. In 32 patients who died <= 72 h postprocedure, mortality resulted from cardiogenic or haemorrhagic shock in 62.5 and 34.4%, respectively. In 31 patients with mortality > 72 h to <= 30 days, cardiogenic shock was the cause of death in 51.6% followed by sepsis (22.6%) and respiratory failure (9.7%). Of the nine patients with death > 30 days, 88.9% died of sepsis, caused by infective endocarditis in half of them. At total of 12 patients revealed cerebrovascular complications. Autopsy revealed unexpected findings in 61.1% and resulted in a partly or completely different cause of death as was clinically determined. Autopsy on patients who underwent TAVI reveals specific patterns of cardiovascular pathology that clearly relate to the time interval between TAVI and death and significantly adds to the clinical diagnosis. Our data support the role of autopsy including investigation of the cerebrum in the quickly evolving era of cardiac device technology

U2 - 10.1007/s00428-017-2076-4

DO - 10.1007/s00428-017-2076-4

M3 - Article

C2 - 28130699

VL - 470

SP - 331

EP - 339

JO - Virchows Archiv

JF - Virchows Archiv

SN - 0945-6317

IS - 3

ER -

ID: 3364153