TAVI TAVR Procedure in Hyderabad | Germanten Hospital

TAVI / TAVR Procedure in Hyderabad


Expert Coronary Angioplasty & Stenting Services

Cardiology Treatments

TAVI / TAVR Procedure in Hyderabad

TAVI, or transcatheter aortic valve implantation (also called TAVR, transcatheter aortic valve replacement), is a minimally invasive procedure that replaces a diseased aortic valve without open-heart surgery. Using a catheter guided through the femoral artery in the groin, a new biological valve is delivered to the heart and deployed precisely within the diseased valve, restoring normal function immediately.

TAVI was originally developed for patients too high-risk for conventional open-heart surgery. A decade of clinical trials has since demonstrated outcomes equivalent or superior to surgical valve replacement across a broadening range of patients. Today, TAVI is a mainstream treatment for severe aortic stenosis and is increasingly performed in intermediate and lower-risk patients at experienced structural heart centers.

What is Aortic Stenosis?

The aortic valve sits between the left ventricle and the aorta, the body's main artery. It opens to allow blood to be pumped out of the heart and closes to prevent backflow. In aortic stenosis, the valve leaflets become thickened and calcified over time, reducing the valve opening and restricting blood flow out of the heart.

The heart compensates initially by pumping harder, causing the left ventricle to thicken. As the valve becomes severely narrowed, the heart can no longer compensate. The classic symptoms of severe aortic stenosis, chest pain on exertion, fainting or near-fainting, and breathlessness, signal a point at which the condition becomes rapidly life-threatening without valve replacement. Without treatment, the median survival after symptom onset is 2 to 3 years.

Aortic stenosis is the most common valve disease requiring intervention in adults over 65, and its prevalence rises sharply with age. It affects approximately 3 to 5% of people over 75 in developed populations.

Who is TAVI Recommended For?

High Surgical Risk

Patients with severe aortic stenosis who are considered too high-risk for conventional open-heart surgery due to advanced age, frailty, previous cardiac surgery, significant lung disease, or major comorbidities. TAVI was originally validated in this group.

Intermediate Surgical Risk

Multiple large trials (PARTNER 2, SURTAVI) demonstrated that TAVI is non-inferior to surgical valve replacement in intermediate-risk patients, with lower rates of stroke and bleeding.

Lower Surgical Risk

The PARTNER 3 and Evolut Low Risk trials showed TAVI superiority or equivalence to surgery in low-risk patients under 70 at two-year follow-up, leading to expanding use in younger patients.

Valve-in-Valve TAVI

Patients with a previously implanted surgical bioprosthetic valve that has deteriorated can have a TAVI valve deployed within the old valve without reoperation.

Specific Anatomical Suitability

TAVI requires adequate femoral artery size for catheter access and appropriate aortic anatomy. CT assessment determines suitability before the procedure.

Patients suitable for both TAVI and surgical valve replacement are discussed at our structural heart multidisciplinary team meeting, which includes interventional cardiologists and cardiac surgeons. The goal is always the option most likely to provide the best long-term outcome for that individual. Learn more about surgical valve replacement.

The TAVI Procedure: Step by Step

Pre-Procedure Planning:

A CT scan of the aorta and access vessels is essential for planning. It measures the size of the aortic valve annulus to select the correct prosthesis size and assesses the access route. A coronary angiogram is also performed to evaluate the coronary arteries before proceeding.

Multidisciplinary Team Decision:

The heart team formally agrees on the procedure based on imaging, risk assessment, and patient preferences.

Anesthesia:

TAVI is performed under general anesthesia or, increasingly, under conscious sedation (the patient is sedated but breathing independently). Sedation is preferred at many centers for lower-risk patients as it reduces intensive care admission and hospital stay.

Access:

In the transfemoral approach (preferred in over 85% of cases), a sheath is placed in the femoral artery in the groin. Alternative access sites (subclavian artery, transaortic, or transcaval) are used when the femoral vessels are too small or diseased.

Crossing the Valve:

A guidewire is passed through the diseased aortic valve under X-ray imaging.

Pre-dilation (Balloon Valvuloplasty):

In some cases, a balloon is first inflated within the narrowed valve to create space for the prosthesis. This step is omitted with some newer valve systems.

Valve Deployment:

The replacement valve, a biological valve made from bovine or porcine pericardium mounted on a metal frame, is delivered on a catheter and positioned precisely at the level of the native aortic valve. The valve is then expanded, either by balloon inflation or self-expansion, and immediately begins functioning.

Assessment:

Echocardiography and angiography confirm correct valve positioning, function, and the absence of significant leakage.

Recovery:

The access site is closed with a vascular closure device. Most patients are transferred to the cardiac ward (not ICU) the same day and are discharged within 2 to 3 days.

The TAVI procedure typically takes 1 to 2 hours. Most patients are walking the following morning and discharged within 2 to 3 days, compared to 5 to 7 days for surgical valve replacement.

TAVI vs Surgical Valve Replacement

Incision

TAVI: Catheter through a small groin puncture. Surgery: Full sternotomy (breastbone divided).

Heart-Lung Bypass

TAVI: Not required. Surgery: Required for conventional open repair.

Hospital Stay

TAVI: 2 to 3 days. Surgery: 5 to 8 days.

Recovery Time

TAVI: 1 to 2 weeks to light activity. Surgery: 6 to 8 weeks.

Stroke Risk

TAVI: Slightly higher in some trials. Newer devices and embolic protection have reduced this significantly.

Paravalvular Leak

TAVI: Slightly higher rate of mild paravalvular leak. Rarely clinically significant with modern devices.

Long-term Durability

Surgical valves have 20+ year follow-up data. TAVI valves have 10-year data showing excellent durability; longer-term data accumulating.

Pacemaker Requirement

TAVI: Higher pacemaker requirement (10 to 20%) due to conduction system disruption. Surgery: Lower (2 to 5%).

Meet Our

Cardiology Doctors

Consult expert cardiologists in Hyderabad at Germanten Hospital


Testimonials

What Our Patients Are Saying

  • counter-img1
    26+
    Years of Experience
  • counter-img2
    20K+
    Successful Surgeries
  • counter-img3
    1M+
    Happy Patients
  • counter-img4
    40+
    Global Awards

Success Stories

Book With Us Now

Get an Appointment

Connect with our experts doctors for guidance

          

Cardiology Hospital Near You in Attapur, Hyderabad

Germanten Hospital is located in Attapur, one of South Hyderabad's most accessible neighborhoods. Patients from across southern and western Hyderabad can reach us within 20 to 30 minutes.

Full address: Germanten Hospital, Attapur, Hyderabad, Telangana 500048. View on Google Maps
Reaching Germanten Hospital from Major Localities:
  • - Mehdipatnam (approx. 8 minutes)
  • - Rajendra Nagar (approx. 10 minutes)
  • - Tolichowki (approx. 7 minutes)
  • - Banjara Hills (approx. 15 minutes)
  • - Jubilee Hills (approx. 18 minutes)
  • - Kondapur & Gachibowli (approx. 25 minutes via PVNR Expressway)
  • - Shamshabad & Airport Road (approx. 30 minutes)
GET ANSWERS

Frequently Asked Questions

Not all patients are suitable for TAVI. Anatomical factors such as insufficient femoral artery size, an extremely large or irregular aortic annulus, or specific aortic root anatomy may favor surgical replacement. Patients with coexisting conditions requiring open cardiac surgery (such as significant coronary disease better treated with bypass) may be better served with combined open surgery. Each case is assessed individually at our structural heart team meeting.
The longest follow-up data available for TAVI valves now extends to 8 to 10 years and shows very low rates of structural valve deterioration. Reassuringly, if a TAVI valve does fail in the future, it can be treated with a second TAVI (valve-in-valve procedure) in most cases, avoiding the need for open surgery. Ongoing registries are collecting long-term data beyond 10 years.
Most TAVI patients are walking the day after the procedure and discharged within 2 to 3 days. Return to light activity (walking, self-care) is typically within one to two weeks. Most patients notice a significant improvement in breathlessness and exercise tolerance within days of the procedure as the valve immediately begins working correctly. Cardiac rehabilitation is recommended to optimize recovery.
Yes. Germanten Hospital performs TAVI as part of our structural heart programme. Each case is reviewed by our multidisciplinary heart team before proceeding. Contact us on +91 9000909073 or book a consultation online to arrange a structural heart assessment.
Not always. Many TAVI procedures today, particularly via the transfemoral route, are performed under conscious sedation rather than general anesthesia. The patient is sedated and comfortable but breathing independently. This reduces intensive care admission, shortens hospital stay, and is associated with lower complication rates in appropriate patients. The anesthesia choice is made based on patient anatomy, clinical status, and center preference.