Heart valve disease treatment depends on:
- The symptoms.
- The severity of the disease.
- If the heart valve problem is getting worse.
Treatment may include:
- Regular health checkups.
- Lifestyle and diet changes.
- Medicines.
- Surgery to repair or replace the valve.
Medications
Some people with heart valve disease need medicines to treat their symptoms. Blood thinners may be given to help prevent blood clots.
Surgery or other procedures
A diseased or damaged heart valve might eventually need to be repaired or replaced, even if you don't have symptoms.
If you need surgery for another heart condition, a surgeon might do valve repair or replacement at the same time.
Methods to repair or replace heart valves include open-heart surgery or minimally invasive heart surgery. Surgeons at some medical centers may do robot-assisted heart valve surgery. The type of heart valve surgery done depends on many things, including age, overall health, and the type and severity of heart valve disease.
Heart valve repair
If you have heart valve disease, your health care team might suggest surgery to repair and save your heart valve. During heart valve repair, the surgeon might:
- Patch holes in a valve.
- Separate valve flaps that have connected.
- Repair the structure of the valve by replacing torn or ruptured cords that support it.
- Remove excess valve tissue so that the valve can close tightly.
- Reduce the outer size of the valve so the flaps can better contact each other.
Heart valve repair procedures include:
-
Annuloplasty. A surgeon tightens or reinforces the outer ring around the valve. This surgery may be done with other treatments to repair a heart valve.
-
Valvuloplasty. This surgery is used to repair the flaps of the valve. It's often done to repair mitral valve prolapse. The surgeon inserts a flexible tube with a balloon on the tip into an artery in the arm or groin area. The surgeon guides the tube to the affected heart valve. The balloon is inflated. This widens the valve opening. The balloon is deflated, and the tube and balloon are removed. Sometimes clips or plugs are passed through the tube to repair the heart valve.
Heart valve replacement
If a heart valve can't be repaired, surgery may be done to replace it. The most commonly replaced valves are the mitral and aortic valves. A surgeon removes the damaged heart valve and replaces it with one of the following:
-
A mechanical valve. This type of artificial heart valve is made of strong material. It also is called a manufactured valve. If you have a mechanical valve, you need blood thinners for life to prevent blood clots.
-
A biological valve. This type of artificial heart valve is made from cow, pig or human heart tissue. Biological tissue valves break down over time and eventually need to be replaced.
Sometimes, the aortic valve is replaced with the person's own pulmonary valve. Then the pulmonary valve is replaced with a biological valve. This more complicated surgery is called the Ross procedure.
Valve replacement typically requires open-heart surgery. But less invasive procedures may be available, depending on which heart valve is affected. For example, if the aortic valve is narrowed, surgeons may do transcatheter aortic valve replacement (TAVR). It uses smaller incisions than those used in open-heart surgery.