Tricuspid valve regurgitation care at Mayo Clinic

Mayo Clinic provides surgical treatment, including tricuspid valve repair and tricuspid valve replacement, for people with heart valve disease.

Your Mayo Clinic care team

A team works together to evaluate and treat people at Mayo Clinic. A team at Mayo Clinic

A team works together to evaluate and treat people at Mayo Clinic.

Mayo Clinic doctors trained in heart disease (cardiologists), heart surgery (cardiac surgeons) and other healthcare professionals work together to evaluate and treat people with tricuspid valve regurgitation. This collaborative approach means care professionals can often evaluate you and develop a personalized treatment plan within 2 to 3 days.

Advanced diagnosis and treatment. With state-of-the-art research and laboratory facilities, Mayo Clinic tricuspid valve experts use advanced technology and sophisticated imaging tests to accurately diagnose heart valve disease. They work together to determine the cause of your symptoms and to determine the most appropriate treatment for you.

Surgical experience and expertise. Cardiovascular surgeons at Mayo Clinic's campus in Minnesota have extensive experience and expertise treating tricuspid valve regurgitation, Ebstein anomaly, and other heart diseases with advanced surgical techniques in adults and children. Surgeons at Mayo Clinic's campuses in Arizona and Florida also perform tricuspid valve regurgitation surgery for adults.

Treatment expertise. Mayo Clinic heart specialists have experience providing treatment for tricuspid valve regurgitation due to a variety of conditions, including:

  • Ebstein anomaly. Mayo Clinic cardiologists and cardiovascular surgeons have many years of experience in treating this congenital heart defect.
  • Carcinoid heart disease. Mayo Clinic cardiologists are experts in evaluating and treating carcinoid heart disease, a rare condition that causes thickening of the tricuspid valve.
  • Heart device leads. Wires used in pacemakers and defibrillators cross the tricuspid valve. This may lead to tricuspid valve regurgitation. Mayo Clinic surgeons have expertise in special techniques to repair or replace the tricuspid valve, while repositioning the device lead.

Jack Long — Live LONG - Beat STRONG to find a cure

Vivien Williams: When Hurricane Sandy slammed into New Jersey, the Long family braced for two storms — the water and winds that raged in their town and their fears about the health of 14-year-old Jack.

Michael Long, Jack's dad: He needs to have surgery. And we were like, you could have picked us up off the floor.

Vivien Williams: Jack needed open heart surgery to repair a rare congenital heart defect called Ebstein's anomaly.

Jack Long, patient: ... really nervous and kind of scared.

Vivien Williams: Even though Jack was born with the condition, he didn't have symptoms until he was a teen and only when he played sports.

Jack Long: ... harder to breathe and I got tired a lot faster.

Michael Long: We know that doing the surgery now prevents damage in the future.

Vivien Williams: The surgery that helped Jack was performed by a specialized team at Mayo Clinic.

Ben Eidem, M.D., Cardiology, Mayo Clinic: Jack was born with a congenital heart defect called tricuspid valve dysplasia or Ebstein anomaly. And that's one of the four valves in the heart, called the tricuspid valve, but when his heart was forming as a fetus, just didn't form correctly.

Vivien Williams: Dr. Ben Eidem says the tricuspid valve's job is to allow blood flowing into the heart from the body to flow to the right ventricle where it's pumped to the lungs for oxygen. If the tricuspid valve is leaky, blood can flow backwards causing the heart to pump harder. Over time, the heart becomes enlarged and functions poorly.

Joseph Dearani, M.D., Surgery, Mayo Clinic: So the idea with surgery is to try to halt that process.

Vivien Williams: Surgeon Dr. Joseph Dearani performed Jack's operation, called the cone procedure. During the operation, Dr. Dearani isolates the deformed leaflets of the tricuspid valve. He then reshapes them so they function properly.

Jack's surgery was a success. He's back to playing soccer and catching waves. But his story doesn't end there. Before his operation, Jack decided to make a difference. With the help of family, friends and a teacher, he started a foundation.

Jack Long: It says "Live LONG - Beat STRONG" to find a cure for any of the congenital heart defects just so you can help kids, anybody, have a better life.

Vivien Williams: He sold bracelets for $2.00, t-shirts for $10.00. His mom, Karen, remembers Jack asking ...

Karen Long, Jack's mom: He goes, do you think we're going to get close to $1,000? Do you think we'll break $1,000? And I said, yeah, I think we could probably break $1,000.

Jack Long: And I would count it every night and look to see how much. I'm like, we could actually make a change here. We could make a difference and help other people.

Vivien Williams: People from Jack's small coastal town that was ravaged by Hurricane Sandy, lined up to donate.

Karen Long: People dropping off checks and they're not even living in their homes. Dropping of checks to us ... to support Jack.

Vivien Williams: He raised well over $1,000.

Jack Long: Just about $10,000.

Dr. Dearani: The thing about Jack's story to me that is the most precious is that it wasn't about him, for Jack. It was about everybody else.

Jack Long: I'm just happy that we could not just help me get through it but help everyone else.

Vivien Williams: For Mayo Clinic News Network, I'm Vivien Williams.

Expertise and rankings

Cardiovascular medicine and cardiovascular surgery team

A team of cardiologists and cardiovascular surgeons work together at Mayo Clinic.

Mayo doctors in the Valvular Heart Disease Clinic have extensive experience and expertise treating tricuspid valve regurgitation and other types of heart valve disease. Mayo Clinic healthcare professionals care for more than 8,500 people with tricuspid valve disease annually.

Congenital heart disease treatment expertise

Mayo doctors trained in pediatric cardiology, adult congenital heart disease, congenital cardiovascular surgery and other areas work together in the Center for Congenital Heart Disease at Mayo Clinic's campus in Minnesota to treat congenital heart defects that may cause tricuspid valve regurgitation, such as Ebstein anomaly. Healthcare professionals at Mayo Clinic's campuses in Arizona and Florida also evaluate adults with Ebstein anomaly and other congenital heart diseases.

Nationally recognized expertise

Mayo Clinic campuses are nationally recognized for expertise in cardiology and cardiovascular surgery:

  • Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minn., Mayo Clinic in Phoenix/Scottsdale, Ariz., and Mayo Clinic in Jacksonville, Fla., are ranked among the Best Hospitals for heart and heart surgery by U.S. News & World Report.
  • Mayo Clinic Children's Center in Rochester is ranked the No. 1 hospital in Minnesota, and the five-state region of Iowa, Minnesota, North Dakota, South Dakota and Wisconsin, according to U.S. News & World Report's 2023–2024 "Best Children's Hospitals" rankings.

With Mayo Clinic's emphasis on collaborative care, specialists at each of the campuses — Minnesota, Arizona and Florida — interact very closely with colleagues at the other campuses and the Mayo Clinic Health System.

Learn more about Mayo Clinic's cardiovascular medicine and cardiovascular surgery departments' expertise and rankings.

Mayo Clinic Children's Center

Highly skilled pediatric experts diagnose and treat all types of conditions in children. As a team, we work together to find answers, set goals and develop a treatment plan tailored to your child's needs.

Learn more about the Children's Center.

Locations, travel and lodging

Mayo Clinic has major campuses in Phoenix and Scottsdale, Arizona; Jacksonville, Florida; and Rochester, Minnesota. The Mayo Clinic Health System has dozens of locations in several states.

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Costs and insurance

Mayo Clinic works with hundreds of insurance companies and is an in-network provider for millions of people.

In most cases, Mayo Clinic doesn't require a physician referral. Some insurers require referrals or may have additional requirements for certain medical care. All appointments are prioritized on the basis of medical need.

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March 12, 2024