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Volume 8, Issue 2 (Suppl)

J Neurol Neurophysiol

ISSN: 2155-9562 JNN, an open access journal

Neurology 2017

March 27-29, 2017

March 27-29, 2017 Madrid, Spain

11

th

World Congress on

Neurology and Therapeutics

Structural heart disease, minimally invasive procedures and the relationship to thromboembolic cerebral

disease

Evelyn M Garcia

Carilion Clinic, USA

Statement of the Problem

: The graying of populations across the globe is associated with increasing rates of structural heart disease

and cardioembolic stroke. Aortic stenosis is the most prevalent cardiac valvular disease in the Western world. Thirty percent of aortic

stenosis patients are not surgical candidates. Stroke is the 4

th

leading cause of death in the Unites States and 2

nd

leading cause of death

in the EU and Europe. Twenty percent of patients have cardiogenic sources of emboli with 50% of those related to non-valvular atrial

fibrillation with greater than 90% of thrombi originating in the left atrial appendage. Greater than 55% of patients with first time stroke

and known non-valvular atrial fibrillation were on anticoagulation therapy, 68% found to be subclinical. Percutaneous procedures

have been developed for each of these conditions with multiple device options and variable routes of deployment. However, the major

complication associated with these procedures is embolic stroke.

Data to be Presented

: Review of incidence of clinical vs non-clinical cerebral events associated with left atrial appendage closure

and transcatheter aortic valve replacement procedures, structural risk factors, and imaging for procedure planning will be presented.

Current data of cerebral protective devices will be reviewed.

Conclusion & Significance

: Percutaneous procedures for treatment of atrial fibrillation and aortic stenosis are non-inferior to

medical therapy and surgical therapy, respectively. Cardioembolic complications remain the major complication associated with these

procedures. Embolic protection devices are promising for mitigation of embolic cerebral events in these two patient populations.

Biography

Evelyn Garcia completed her M.D. at the University of New Mexico School of Medicine, Diagnostic Radiology residency at the University of New Mexico Medical Center,

and Body Imaging fellowship at the University of Utah Medical Center. She is board certifi ed in Diagnostic Radiology and Cardiovascular Computed Tomography. She

is the Chairman and Medical Director of Radiology at Virginia Tech Carilion School of Medicine and of Carilion Clinic, a six hospital system with 800 bed fl agship Level I

Trauma and Stroke certifi ed center. She is imager for the structural heart valve team of Carilion Clinic.

emgarcia@carilionclinic.org

Evelyn M Garcia, J Neurol Neurophysiol 2017, 8:2 (Suppl)

http://dx.doi.org/10.4172/2155-9562.C1.046