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BMJ 2004;328:63-64 (10 January), doi:10.1136/bmj.328.7431.63
Exercise testing is the key investigation
| The first 150 words of the full text of this article appear below. |
Aortic stenosis is the commonest valve disease in the developed world that requires surgery. In elderly people its prevalence is approximately 3%.1 Usually a long latent period precedes the cardinal symptoms of the disease.2 Replacement of the aortic valve is an excellent treatment for severe symptomatic aortic stenosissymptoms improve in most patients and life expectancy approaches that of age matched controls.3 The risks of surgery are declining steadily. In patients who are having their first operation with a mechanical prosthesis and do not require a bypass graft, perioperative mortality is only 2%.4 No randomised controlled trials of aortic valve replacement in symptomatic aortic stenosis have been conducted, yet the level of evidence is regarded as class I because of the dramatic improvement in prognosis with surgery.5
In severe asymptomatic aortic stenosis the risks of perioperative morbidity, mortality, and long term complications related to the prosthesis have to be weighed against
Gerald P McCann, specialist registrar
Department of Cardiology, Glenfield General Hospital, Leicester LE3 9QP (gerry@mccann1912.Freeserve.co.uk)
W Stewart Hillis, professor of cardiovascular and exercise testing
Department of Medicine and Therapeutics, University of Glasgow, Western Infirmary, Glasgow G11 6NT
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Israeli students are refusing to perform intimate examinations on anaesthetised women without their informed consent.