
Aortic stenosis is a birth defect in which the valve between the heart and the blood vessel called the aorta is deformed and too narrow to allow healthy blood flow.
The valves in the heart are like one-way doors that allow blood to flow in the appropriate direction. A healthy aortic valve is made up of three flaps, called leaflets, which open and close together. When oxygenated blood leaves the lungs, it goes into the left side of the heart and exits into the aorta, which carries blood from the heart to arteries throughout the body.
When the aortic valve is deformed, blood may back up into the heart and lungs. Aortic stenosis can be a congenital disorder (meaning it's present at birth) or can be caused by other conditions. It can affect babies, children and adults, although often symptoms don't occur until middle age or later. At one time, the condition was associated with childhood rheumatic fever, which has become less common.
There are different types of aortic stenosis that may occur independently or in combination with one another. Aortic stenosis also may occur with other heart defects. The different types include:
Aortic stenosis is rare in infancy, occurring in only about a third of one percent of births. Aortic stenosis can be mild, moderate or critical. Symptoms of the disease often don't appear until middle age or later. Although some people with aortic stenosis don't experience symptoms, the most common symptoms include:
Because there may be no obvious symptoms of aortic stenosis, the first sign of the condition is often a heart murmur, an extra sound the doctor hears during a chest examination. To make a definite diagnosis of aortic stenosis, the following tests may be performed:
Babies, children and young adults who have aortic stenosis can be treated surgically or with a catheter procedure that splits the deformed valve leaflets to enlarge the opening without replacing the valve. These procedures are successful only if the aortic valve is still thin enough to be manipulated.
Stenosis may return and eventually cause the valves to stiffen. Another surgery or catheter procedure may be required later in life to further repair or replace the valve.
The catheter procedure is called balloon valvoplasty. During this procedure, a catheter — a thin, flexible, plastic tube — is inserted into the heart via blood vessels in the leg. Catheters can be used to carry very small instruments or repair devices, such as a balloon, to the heart. A balloon at the tip of the catheter is inserted into the narrow opening in the valve and then inflated to stretch the valve opening and separate the valve leaflets.
Reviewed by health care specialists at UCSF Children's Hospital.
Last updated
January 21, 2010

Cardiac Catheterization Laboratory
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