# Relevance of Pressure Recovery in a Young Patient With Aortic Stenosis and Small-Caliber Aorta

**Authors:** Jan-Christian Reil, Hazem Omran, Nael Hasan, Gert-Hinrich Reil, Lech Paluszkiewicz

PMC · DOI: 10.1016/j.jaccas.2024.103071 · 2025-03-05

## TL;DR

A young patient with aortic stenosis had falsely high valve pressure readings due to a phenomenon called pressure recovery, which was corrected with invasive measurements.

## Contribution

This case highlights the importance of recognizing pressure recovery in small aortas to avoid misdiagnosis of severe aortic stenosis.

## Key findings

- Doppler echocardiography overestimated the severity of aortic stenosis due to pressure recovery in a small aorta.
- Invasive measurements confirmed a moderate aortic stenosis after correcting for pressure recovery.
- Angina was caused by a high-grade stenosis in the left anterior descending artery, not the aortic valve.

## Abstract

The case concerns a 20-year-old patient with Canadian Cardiovascular Society class II angina who was initially referred for aortic valve replacement because of a suspected high-grade aortic valve stenosis with increased transvalvular gradients (max/mean: 70/40 mm Hg) measured by Doppler echocardiography. Examinations using transesophageal echocardiography and computed tomography showed a sufficiently opening bicuspid aortic valve, excluded supra- and subvalvular stenoses, and measured a narrow aorta (diameter: 2 cm). The explanation for the highly increased gradients across the aortic valve was the pressure recovery (PR) phenomenon, which cannot be detected by Doppler gradients. Distal to a stenosis kinetic energy is converted back into potential energy, most effectively in small aortas (area: <3 cm2). This reduces the actual transvalvular pressure gradient, which can directly be determined with cardiac catheterization. Accordingly, invasive measurements showed a moderate aortic stenosis (mean transvalvular pressure: 19 mm Hg), almost identical to the PR-corrected Doppler measurements. A high-grade stenosis of the proximal left anterior descending artery was treated interventionally, which could explain the angina symptoms.

## Linked entities

- **Diseases:** aortic stenosis (MONDO:0042981)

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** Aortic Stenosis (MESH:D001024), stenosis (MESH:D003251), angina (MESH:D000787), supra- and subvalvular stenoses (MESH:D011662), bicuspid aortic valve (MESH:D000082882)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Figures

4 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC11911846/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC11911846