Mitral valve disease remains one of the most challenging cardiac conditions to treat in elderly patients, especially when complicated by pulmonary hypertension, tricuspid valve leakage, frailty and long-standing rheumatic involvement. While many families fear surgery at an advanced age, recent outcomes at KIMS Hospitals, Thane show that carefully timed intervention, meticulous planning and structured postoperative care can dramatically change the prognosis — even for patients considered “high-risk.”
Why Mitral Valve Disease in the Elderly Is Complex
The mitral valve plays a crucial role in regulating blood flow between the left atrium and the left ventricle. When it becomes severely narrowed or excessively leaky, the back pressure affects the lungs, leading to breathlessness, swelling, right-sided heart strain and progressive functional decline.
In elderly individuals, the challenge is heightened. Many present with years of untreated rheumatic disease, weakened ventricular function, rhythm disturbances like atrial fibrillation, or coexisting coronary artery blockages. These overlapping issues not only increase operative risk but also complicate ICU recovery and rehabilitation.
How Two Elderly Women Became an Example of What Modern Cardiac Care Can Achieve
At KIMS Hospitals, two elderly women recently arrived in extremely fragile conditions — both with advanced mitral valve disease, both struggling with breathlessness, swelling and poor heart function. One had severe mitral regurgitation coupled with very high pulmonary pressures and tricuspid valve leakage, while another had tight mitral stenosis with massively enlarged atria and signs of right-heart failure.
Rather than rushing into immediate surgery, the team adopted a stepwise approach: stabilising the women in the ICU, correcting fluid overload, assessing rhythm issues, improving nutritional status and repeating specialised heart imaging. In one patient, pressures in the lungs reduced significantly after medical optimisation, making her a safer candidate for surgery. In the other, a right-heart catheterisation showed that her pulmonary hypertension was still reversible — a key requirement for successful intervention.
Once stabilised, both women underwent personalised surgical correction. This included mitral valve replacement using bioprosthetic valves, closure of the left atrial appendage, addressing associated tricuspid valve leakage, and in one case, performing bypass grafting for blocked coronary arteries. Despite their frailty and predicted risks, both women recovered steadily with gradual ventilator weaning, intensive physiotherapy and nutritional rehabilitation. Their recoveries are a reminder that age should not automatically disqualify someone from life-improving heart surgery.
The Expert View: Why Success Depends on Strategy, Not Luck
Reflecting on these outcomes, Dr. Saumya Sekhar Jenasamant, Consultant Cardiothoracic & Vascular Surgeon, KIMS Hospitals Thane, emphasises the importance of a tailored approach rather than a standardised one.
“Mitral valve disease in elderly patients is never just a valve issue — it’s a combination of lung pressure, weakened ventricles, rhythm disturbances and overall frailty. What determines success is precise timing, addressing all associated cardiac issues during the same surgery, and committing to robust postoperative rehabilitation,” he explains.
He adds, “When we invest time in optimising the patient before surgery and customise the operation to their exact pathology, even the highest-risk patients can walk home with excellent outcomes.”
A New Perspective for Families
For many families, the prospect of open-heart surgery in elderly patients can feel overwhelming. But emerging evidence and real-world experience show that with modern cardiac evaluation tools, safer valve technologies and multidisciplinary ICU care, surgical outcomes have never been better.
The recent recoveries at KIMS Hospitals reflect a larger shift in cardiac care: moving away from fear-based decision-making and towards informed, evidence-based planning. These stories highlight that the combination of the right surgical timing, personalised operative strategy and dedicated rehabilitation can allow elderly patients not only to survive but to thrive.
The Takeaway
Advanced mitral valve surgery, when planned thoughtfully, can restore health, mobility and dignity — even in elderly individuals with complex heart disease. These successes stand as a testament to what comprehensive, expert-led cardiac care can achieve.