Learn about the types of lung valve disease and treatment options at Mayo Clinic.
Update Date: 25.02.2025
Pulmonary valve disease is a type of heart valve disease. It affects the valve between the heart's lower right chamber and the artery that delivers blood to the lungs. That artery is called the pulmonary artery. The valve is called the pulmonary valve.
A diseased or damaged pulmonary valve doesn't work the way it should. It changes how blood flows from the heart to the lungs.
Types of pulmonary valve disease include:
Symptoms of pulmonary valve disease depend on the specific valve condition and how much blood flow is changed or blocked. Some babies are born with pulmonary valve disease. Symptoms may be noticed soon after birth. But sometimes symptoms aren't seen until later in life.
In general, pulmonary valve disease symptoms may include:
Babies born with pulmonary valve disease may have blue or gray skin due to low oxygen levels. Depending on skin color, these changes may be harder or easier to see.
Make an appointment for a health checkup if you or your child has:
Call 911 or your local emergency number if chest pain is sudden or can't be explained.
Quick diagnosis and treatment of pulmonary valve disease can help reduce the risk of complications.
Usually, pulmonary valve disease is caused by a heart condition that develops before birth, called a congenital heart defect. But pulmonary valve disease may happen later in life as a complication of another illness.
To understand how pulmonary valve disease happens, it might help to know how the valve works.
The pulmonary valve is like a one-way door from the lower right heart chamber, called the right ventricle, to the lungs. Blood usually flows from that chamber through the pulmonary valve and into the lungs. Blood gets oxygen in the lungs to take to the body.
When the pulmonary valve doesn't work as it should, the heart must work harder to pump blood to the lungs. The extra work can cause the right ventricle to become thick.
Things that can raise the risk of pulmonary valve disease are:
Some types of pulmonary valve stenosis are diagnosed at birth or soon after. But sometimes, pulmonary valve disease isn't noticed until later in life.
To diagnose pulmonary valve disease, a healthcare professional uses a stethoscope to listen to the heart. A whooshing sound, called a heart murmur, may be heard.
Tests are done to check the heart and confirm a diagnosis of pulmonary valve disease. Tests may include:
After testing confirms a diagnosis of heart valve disease, your healthcare team may tell you the stage of disease. Staging helps determine the most appropriate treatment.
The stage of heart valve disease depends on many things, including symptoms, disease severity, the structure of the valve or valves, and blood flow through the heart and lungs.
Heart valve disease is staged into four basic groups:
Pulmonary valve disease treatment depends on:
Treatment may include:
If symptoms are mild, the only treatment may be regular health checkups and imaging tests to see how the heart is working.
Surgery or another treatment may be needed to fix or replace the pulmonary valve.
The decision to repair or replace a damaged pulmonary valve depends on many things, including:
Pulmonary valve surgery may be done at the same time as other heart valve surgeries. In general, surgeons recommend pulmonary valve repair when possible, as it saves the heart valve and improves heart function.
Types of surgery or procedures used to treat pulmonary valve disease include:
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