Treatment for tricuspid valve regurgitation depends on the cause and how severe it is. The goals of treatment are to:
- Help the heart work better.
- Reduce symptoms.
- Improve quality of life.
- Prevent complications.
Tricuspid regurgitation treatment may include:
- Medicines.
- A heart procedure.
- Surgery to repair or replace the heart valve.
The exact treatment depends on your symptoms and how severe the valve disease is. Some people with mild tricuspid valve regurgitation only need regular health checkups. Your healthcare team tells you how often you need appointments.
Medications
Your healthcare professional may suggest medicines to control symptoms of tricuspid valve regurgitation. Medicines also may be used to treat the cause.
Some medicines used for tricuspid valve regurgitation are:
- Diuretics. Often called water pills, these medicines make you urinate more often. This helps prevent fluid buildup in the body.
- Potassium-sparing diuretics. Also called aldosterone antagonists, these medicines may help some people with heart failure live longer.
- Other medicines to treat or control heart failure.
- Medicines to control irregular heartbeats. Some people with tricuspid regurgitation have a type of irregular heartbeat called atrial fibrillation (AFib).
Therapies
Supplemental oxygen may be given to those who have pulmonary hypotension with tricuspid regurgitation.
Surgery or other procedures
Surgery may be needed to repair or replace a diseased or damaged tricuspid valve.
Tricuspid valve repair or replacement may be done as open-heart surgery or as a minimally invasive heart surgery. Sometimes, tricuspid valve disease may be treated with a catheter-based procedure. The treatment can help improve blood flow and reduce symptoms of heart valve disease.
You may need tricuspid valve repair or replacement surgery if:
- The valve disease is severe and you have symptoms such as shortness of breath.
- Your heart is growing larger or weaker, even if you don't have symptoms of tricuspid regurgitation.
- You have tricuspid valve regurgitation and need heart surgery for another condition, such as mitral valve disease.
Types of heart valve surgery to treat tricuspid regurgitation include:
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Tricuspid valve repair. Surgeons recommend valve repair when possible. It saves the heart valve. It also may reduce the need for long-term use of blood thinners.
Tricuspid valve repair is traditionally done as an open-heart surgery. A long cut is made in the center of the chest. A surgeon may patch holes or tears in the valve, or separate or reconnect valve flaps. Sometimes the surgeon removes or reshapes tissue to help the tricuspid valve close more tightly. The cords of tissue that support the valve also may be replaced.
If tricuspid regurgitation is caused by Ebstein anomaly, heart surgeons may do a type of valve repair called the cone procedure. During the cone procedure, the surgeon separates the valve flaps that close off the tricuspid valve from the underlying heart muscle. The flaps are then rotated and reattached.
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Tricuspid valve replacement. If the tricuspid valve can't be repaired, surgery may be needed to replace the valve. Tricuspid valve replacement surgery may be done as open-heart surgery or minimally invasive surgery.
During tricuspid valve replacement, a surgeon removes the damaged or diseased valve. The valve is replaced with a mechanical valve or a valve made from cow, pig or human heart tissue. A tissue valve is called a biological valve.
If you have a mechanical valve, you need to take blood thinners for the rest of your life to prevent blood clots. Biological tissue valves don't require lifelong blood thinners. But they can wear down over time and may need to be replaced. Together, you and your care team discuss the risks and benefits of each type of valve to determine the best one for you.
- Valve-in-valve replacement. If you have a biological tissue tricuspid valve that's no longer working, a catheter procedure may be done instead of open-heart surgery to replace the valve. The doctor inserts a thin, hollow tube called a catheter into a blood vessel and guides it to the tricuspid valve. The replacement valve goes through the catheter and into the existing biological valve.
After tricuspid repair or replacement, regular health checkups are needed to make sure the heart is working as it should.
Pregnancy
Careful and regular checkups are needed for those who have tricuspid valve disease during pregnancy. If you have tricuspid regurgitation, you may be told not to get pregnant to reduce the risk of complications, including heart failure.