The Ross ProcedureIn the
early 1960's, Donald Ross in London devised a procedure where he removed
a patient's pulmonary valve along with a portion of the pulmonary artery
and placed it in the aortic valve position for patient's with aortic
valve disease.
The concept was that the ideal valve replacement for the aortic valve
was a patient's own pulmonary valve. Since it was the patient's
own tissue, it should last forever.
It turns out that in select surgeons' hands, the Ross Procedure has
had considerable success. However, it is a formidable procedure
and it has associated with it some very significant risks.
First, the pulmonary valve is very delicate and it is not used to the
high pressure of the aortic position. As a result, the pulmonary
valve may leak over time. Second, having harvested a normal
pulmonary valve, it needs to be replaced. The replacement is
usually a cadaver pulmonary valve which may have it's own set of
complications.
Critics of the Ross Procedure believe that it is too complex of a
procedure with variable success and significant risks.
I have been trained in the Ross Procedure and I have performed a
number of these procedures with success. However, I have had one
patient who required a second operation due to failure of the pulmonary
valve in the aortic position. This has tempered my enthusiasm for
this difficult procedure.