Heyde's syndrome is a syndrome of aortic valve stenosis associated with gastrointestinal bleeding from colonic angiodysplasia. It is named after Dr. Edward C. Heyde, who first described the association in 1958.
Aortic valve stenosis is identified on echocardiography (ultrasound studies of the heart), where a decreased Orifice Area of the aortic valve implies stenosis.
Routine testing for Von Willebrand disease (see below) generally fails to identify the coagulation abnormality, as only the high-molecular weight-multimers (HMWM) of von Willebrand factor are decreased. Only dynamic platelet function analysis (PFA) might be of some use in this respect.
Warkentin et al (1992) proposed that the link between aortic stenosis and bleeding was due to a mild form of von Willebrand disease. Some later reports confirmed the suspicion, including a 2002 study by the same group that showed resolution of the coagulation abnormality after aortic valve replacement.
In 2003 a study by Vincentelli et al finally gave an explanation for the remarkable phenomenon. It showed how the subtle form of von Willebrand disease present in Heyde syndrome patients resolved rapidly after heart valve replacement of the stenosed aortic valve. The coagulation abnormality, the study poses, is possibly caused by the increased breakdown of the very large von Willebrand factor molecule by its natural catabolic enzyme (named ADAMTS13) under conditions of high shear stress around the valve.
Vincentelli et al argue that severe forms of Heyde's syndrome might be sufficient reason for aortic valve replacement, even if the stenosis is otherwise clinically unimportant and is not likely to cause complications.
The statistical association was proven before there was any clue why patients with aortic valve stenosis had a higher occurrence of colonic bleeding. Already in 1958, a letter in the New England Journal of Medicine (Goldman et al) reported an odds ratio of almost 3.0 between the two diseases.
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