Conditions treated with tricuspid valve replacement or repair
If your tricuspid valve disease is severe, your valve may need to be surgically replaced or repaired. Surgery is used to treat many types of valve disease that affect the tricuspid valve, including:
- Tricuspid valve stenosis: The thickening and narrowing of the opening of the tricuspid valve, restricting blood from flowing normally through the valve.
- Tricuspid valve regurgitation (leak): The leaflets (flaps) of the valve do not close properly or tightly enough. This causes blood to flow backward through the valve into the chamber it came from. This condition is also called valve insufficiency.
To preserve your heart’s function and lower the risk of infection, our expert surgeons repair your tricuspid valve rather than replace it. Whenever possible, we use robotic-assisted surgery for these procedures. Your cardiac team determines the right type of tricuspid valve surgery for you based on your heart structure, additional heart conditions, age, and general health.
When possible, our cardiac surgeons will surgically repair your tricuspid valve. Minimally invasive heart surgery, including robotic surgery, is a surgical option for tricuspid repair. Depending on your diagnosis, your repair may include:
- Ring annuloplasty: To correct tricuspid regurgitation, the surgeon tightens the valve by sewing a ring (made of metal, cloth, or tissue) around it.
- Commissurotomy: By separating or cutting fused valve flaps (called cusps or leaflets), the surgeon opens a narrowed (stenotic) valve.
- Valve flap repair: The surgeon corrects your tricuspid valve flaps by trimming, patching, or reshaping them so that they close tightly.
Your doctor may recommend surgery to replace your tricuspid valve if repair is not an option. During either minimally invasive or open-chest surgery, your surgeon removes the diseased tricuspid valve and replaces it with either:
- Mechanical valve: This man-made valve can last as long as 30 years. You will need to take lifelong blood-thinning medications to prevent blood clots with a mechanical valve.
- Biological valve: This type of valve (made from cow, pig, or human heart tissue) lasts 10 to 20 years.