gms | German Medical Science

64th Annual Meeting of the German Society of Neurosurgery (DGNC)

German Society of Neurosurgery (DGNC)

26 - 29 May 2013, Düsseldorf

How defective are “defective” explanted valves?

Meeting Abstract

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  • Alfred Aschoff - Heidelberg
  • Bahram Hashemi - Praxis für Neurochirurgie, Spezielle Schmerztherapie, Singen
  • Daniel Hertle - Neurochirurgische Universitätsklinik Heidelberg

Deutsche Gesellschaft für Neurochirurgie. 64. Jahrestagung der Deutschen Gesellschaft für Neurochirurgie (DGNC). Düsseldorf, 26.-29.05.2013. Düsseldorf: German Medical Science GMS Publishing House; 2013. DocMI.02.02

doi: 10.3205/13dgnc293, urn:nbn:de:0183-13dgnc2931

Published: May 21, 2013

© 2013 Aschoff et al.
This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/deed.en). You are free: to Share – to copy, distribute and transmit the work, provided the original author and source are credited.


Outline

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Objective: In shunt papers the causes for shunt revisions such as ventricular/distal catheter occlusion, migration, infection, were specified. These factors are selfevident or can be checked with simple methods (flushing, watercolumn). The same is true for visible valve lesions: body ruptures, in transparent bodies also debris and broken adjustment rotors; not-transparent valves remain enigmatous. Ca. 20–50 % of these lesions are iatrogeneously produced during explantation. Only a few use a rubric “lesion during explantation”, most classify ”insufficiency”.

Primary patent valves can suck air, blood or debris during OP, which change the hydraulic properties. After >1 h protein drys and transform to an sticking mass, insolvable by water or flushing. Ultrasound cleaning (cavitation 42,000 Hz) can remove some occludates. Ca. >98 % of “insufficient valves” goes without investigations into trash, a few to producers or independent valve labs (closed since 2010). The classification “defective valve” is arbitrary.

Method: Between 1987–2010 we tested 586 explanted valves, 62% of 942 test-specimen. Infected and totally obstructed probes were excluded. If possible, we made a test with valve in situ using water-column. After explantation of suspect valves and first inspection we cleaned the valve avoiding forced flushing. A desinfection with alcohol for some hours followed; storage under water.

We compared the documented comment of the explanteur with the test results, typically after a simplified ISO-test.

Results: We observed no infectious problems. The mean deviation of new valves was 57 mm H2O (measured with flowrates of manufacturers), all testable spezimen displayed Ø 66 mm H2O failure. Of new valves 35.1 % were accurat (±20 mm H2O) compared to 35.6%. That means, that most explanted valves showed a similar accuracy and were not “defective”. Looking on valve design the ball-valves had the best results, followed by diaphragm, distal-, proximal slit and Orbis-Sigma-valves.

Conclusions: A high quote of “defective valves” are intact and the explantation an expensive error. The most common cause for “blockade” are air-bubbles in the valves, which can increase the resistance by 350 %.

Professional tests of explanted valves are comparable to investigations of crashed airplanes, which showed decisional informations for failure analyses and safer technologies.