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Your Incision Should Be Your Decision™

Aortic valve second opinion

Before TAVR or surgery, understand what fits your heart.

A cardiac surgeon and cardiologist independently review the documented severity, symptoms, timing, anatomy, and complete record. TAVR, SAVR, repair or reconstruction, valve choice, and lifetime planning are addressed only when they apply to your case.

What happens next: A member of our team will call within 2 business hours. During business hours, a same-day conversation with a cardiac surgeon or cardiologist may be arranged only when clinically appropriate and a physician is available.

2
independent physician reviews
1
co-signed written report
24 hr
after required records and imaging are confirmed complete

No referral or travel required. With your authorization, the records team can help obtain what is needed. $495 includes the two-physician written review and co-signed report. Live physician consultation begins with WHITEGLOVE Consult at $995.

WHITEGLOVE Insights™Aortic valve decision map
Your complete recordOne valve.
A lifetime plan.
01Severity + symptomsEcho · progression · heart response
02TimingIntervene · monitor · clarify
03Relevant pathTAVR · SAVR · reconstruction
04Lifetime strategyValve choice · durability · next procedure
TAVRCatheter-based replacementSAVRSurgical replacementRepair or reconstructionSelected anatomy only
Cardiac surgeonIndependent reviewCardiologistIndependent reviewOne co-signed report

The question is not simply “TAVR or surgery?” It is “which path fits the whole case—and the years ahead?”

Message Us about my decision

Severe aortic stenosis, in context

The diagnosis starts the conversation. It does not finish the decision.

Severe aortic stenosis can become life-threatening, particularly when symptoms or changes in heart function are present. The urgency and best treatment path depend on the complete clinical picture. Continue following your treating team’s instructions while seeking clarification.

01

Severity and timing

Symptoms, valve area, velocity, gradients, ventricular response, and the trajectory of prior testing help explain why intervention is—or is not—being discussed now.

02

Anatomy and access

Valve morphology, annular dimensions, calcium pattern, coronary height, aortic dimensions, and vascular access can change which approaches are technically reasonable.

03

Age and lifetime strategy

Age is only one input. Expected longevity, valve durability, future reintervention, pacemaker risk, and future access to the coronary arteries belong in the same conversation.

04

Everything else that needs attention

Coronary disease, an enlarged aorta, another valve problem, or a rhythm procedure may make a combined operation worth discussing—or may favor a different sequence.

TAVR versus SAVR

Two established paths. No universal winner.

The purpose of a second opinion is not to favor a catheter or an incision. It is to make the reasons, trade-offs, and uncertainties in your specific record visible.

Catheter-based path

TAVR

TAVR replaces the aortic valve through a catheter; it does not repair the native valve. It may offer a shorter initial recovery for appropriately selected patients. Anatomy, vascular access, valve durability, pacemaker risk, paravalvular leak, and future coronary access still matter.

  • Does the anatomy support a catheter approach?
  • What could this choice mean for the next valve?
  • Will future coronary access remain practical?
Surgical path

SAVR

Surgery may involve valve replacement or, in selected regurgitation or aortic-root cases, repair or reconstruction. It can also address bypass disease, an enlarged aorta, another valve, or atrial fibrillation during the same operation. Recovery and operative risk deserve individualized review.

  • Is another cardiac problem best treated at the same time?
  • Would a smaller surgical approach be reasonable?
  • If surgery is chosen, which prosthesis fits the lifetime plan?

A recommendation can also be to clarify the workup, continue surveillance, or revisit timing when the available record supports that discussion. This service does not diagnose or prescribe treatment.

The lifetime view

Choose the next valve with the next decade in view.

A first procedure can shape the feasibility of the second. A useful review looks beyond the immediate recovery to durability, reintervention, coronary access, and what else may need treatment.

Active adult preparing to leave home
Life after treatment mattersRecovery is one chapter. Durability, medication, and future options belong in the same plan.
01

Age is context—not a verdict

Chronological age, overall health, frailty, life expectancy, anatomy, and personal priorities should be considered together. A single cutoff cannot decide the right path for an individual.

02

Durability reaches beyond the first procedure

The discussion may include the expected lifespan of a transcatheter or surgical tissue valve, the possibility of valve-in-valve treatment, and what a future reoperation could involve.

03

Future coronary access can matter

A transcatheter valve’s frame and position may affect later access to the coronary arteries. That issue deserves attention when future catheter procedures are reasonably foreseeable.

04

Mechanical versus tissue is a separate decision

When surgical replacement is being considered, a mechanical valve may offer greater durability but generally requires lifelong anticoagulation. A tissue valve may avoid lifelong warfarin but can deteriorate over time.

05

The rest of the heart can change the plan

Coronary bypass, aortic repair, another valve procedure, or rhythm surgery cannot always be addressed through the same catheter-based pathway.

06

Your priorities belong in the record

Recovery, anticoagulation, future procedures, travel, caregiving responsibilities, and tolerance for uncertainty are legitimate parts of shared decision-making.

WHITEGLOVE Heart Team

The operating-room view and the cardiology view—on the same complete record.

Every service level includes both independent reviews and both physician signatures. The physicians confer before the report is finalized.

Same complete recordTwo clinical perspectives
01

Cardiac surgeon

Replacement or reconstruction · prosthesis strategy · operative access · combined procedures · reoperation

02

Cardiologist

Severity · imaging · progression · coronary context · catheter feasibility · surveillance

Independent reviewsPhysician conferenceOne co-signed report
Meet the entire WHITEGLOVE Heart Team

WHITEGLOVE Insights™

Your valve decision, organized around your case.

The report is written for patients and families, but grounded in the complete source record, current evidence, and two physician reviews.

Download a sample report
WHITEGLOVE Insights™Aortic valve review

Your anatomy.
Your options.
Your next questions.

Aortic valve anatomy illustration
Patient-specific anatomySeverity, structure, and the decision in front of you.
Cardiac surgeonCardiologist
01

Your current clinical picture

The diagnosis, symptoms, serial testing, treating team’s plan, and the findings driving the discussion—clearly tied to the source record.

02

TAVR and SAVR side by side

The benefits, burdens, technical considerations, and unanswered questions for each path when both are clinically reasonable.

03

Your lifetime valve strategy

Age, expected longevity, durability, reintervention, future coronary access, and prosthesis choice considered together.

04

Individualized surgical risk

STS PROM, EuroSCORE II, and AATS considered separately, with the available inputs, missing data, and model limitations made visible.

05

Your anatomy—not a generic diagram

Patient-facing explanations connect the relevant echo, CT, catheterization, and aortic findings to the decision in front of you.

06

What may still be missing

A practical check for unresolved imaging, measurements, testing, or clinical context to discuss with the treating team.

07

Surgeon and center fit

Procedure-specific experience, public outcomes, complex-aortic capability, geography, and practical considerations when they matter.

08

Questions for the next conversation

A concise set of questions and next steps to bring back to the physicians who know you and will provide your care.

Ready for an independent read?

Put a cardiac surgeon and cardiologist on the same complete record.

The $495 option includes both independent physician reviews and one co-signed written report. Live consultation is not included at this level.

What may still be missing

A decision is only as complete as the record behind it.

A missing study does not automatically mean care was inadequate. It means the limits of the available review should be visible—and turned into useful questions for the treating team.

01

Echocardiography

Valve severity, ventricular response, other valves, and serial change—not only one number from one study.

02

CT planning

Annulus, calcium pattern, coronary height, aortic dimensions, and vascular access when a catheter procedure is being considered.

03

Coronary assessment

Whether coronary disease is present and whether it changes the choice or sequence of treatment.

04

Aorta and other valves

Whether an enlarged aorta, mitral disease, or another structural problem belongs in the same decision.

05

Risk-model inputs

The clinical and laboratory variables needed for a defensible estimate, plus the limits of every model.

06

Functional and frailty context

Mobility, independence, pulmonary status, kidney function, and other factors that may not be captured by the valve diagnosis alone.

Evidence, with its limits visible

Guidelines and risk models inform the review. Physicians interpret them.

Risk estimates describe modeled outcomes for patients with similar inputs. They do not predict an individual result and do not replace clinical judgment.

How it works

From scattered records to a clearer valve conversation.

The 24-hour written-review clock starts only after all required records and imaging for your case have been received and confirmed complete.

  1. 01

    Message us about the decision

    Tell us what you were told, what is already scheduled, and what still feels unresolved. No referral or records are needed to begin.

  2. 02

    We help assemble the complete record

    Upload what you have or authorize the records team to help gather the imaging, reports, notes, labs, and proposed plan required for review.

  3. 03

    Two physicians review independently

    A cardiac surgeon and cardiologist examine the same complete record from different clinical perspectives, then confer.

  4. 04

    Receive one co-signed report

    Your WHITEGLOVE Insights™ report is delivered within 24 hours only after all required records and imaging have been received and confirmed complete.

See the complete review process

Choose the support you want

Every option begins with the same two-physician review.

Start with the written report. Add physician consultation or concierge access only if it fits your decision. Direct pay; no insurance claim is submitted.

02

WHITEGLOVE Consult

$995

The written report plus a live consultation with one reviewing physician.

03

WHITEGLOVE Heart Team

$1,495

The written report plus both reviewing physicians together on the consultation.

04

WHITEGLOVE Concierge

$2,495

The Heart Team consultation plus concierge access until the day of surgery.

Aortic valve second opinion FAQ

Questions patients and families ask before choosing a valve path.

When should I seek an aortic valve second opinion?

A second opinion can be useful when aortic valve intervention is being proposed and you want to understand the timing, whether TAVR or surgical replacement fits the documented anatomy, what another heart or aortic condition adds to the decision, or how today’s choice may affect future procedures. It should not delay urgent or time-sensitive care directed by your treating team.

Is TAVR better than open aortic valve surgery?

Neither option is better for every patient. TAVR may offer a shorter initial recovery for appropriately selected patients. Surgical replacement may be more suitable for certain anatomy, lifetime-management goals, or cases that also need bypass, aortic repair, another valve procedure, or rhythm surgery. The review explains how those considerations apply to the available record without choosing treatment for you.

How do age and life expectancy affect TAVR versus SAVR?

Age is one input in a broader lifetime-management discussion. Expected longevity, anatomy, frailty, valve durability, potential reintervention, future coronary access, other cardiac disease, and personal priorities can all influence which options are reasonable to discuss with the treating team.

Does a bicuspid aortic valve change the decision?

It can. Bicuspid morphology, the pattern of calcification, annular and aortic dimensions, coronary anatomy, and associated enlargement of the aorta may affect the technical feasibility and trade-offs of catheter-based and surgical approaches. The decision requires the actual imaging and clinical context.

Will the review compare mechanical and tissue valves?

When surgical valve replacement is a relevant option, the report can organize the trade-offs between mechanical and tissue prostheses. These may include durability, lifelong anticoagulation, bleeding and clotting considerations, lifestyle, pregnancy considerations when relevant, and possible future valve procedures. The final choice belongs with you and your treating physicians.

What records are needed for an aortic valve second opinion?

The exact record depends on the decision. It commonly includes echocardiogram images and reports, CT imaging when TAVR is being evaluated, catheterization or coronary assessment, clinical notes, laboratory results, medication history, and the proposed treatment plan. With your authorization, the records team can help identify, request, and organize what is needed.

Who reviews my aortic valve case?

A cardiac surgeon and cardiologist independently review the same complete record, then confer and co-sign one WHITEGLOVE Insights™ report. Both perspectives are included at every service level.

How quickly is the written report delivered?

The written report is delivered within 24 hours only after all records and imaging required for your review have been received and confirmed complete. Time spent identifying, requesting, transferring, or collecting records and imaging is outside that 24-hour window.

How much does an aortic valve second opinion cost?

WHITEGLOVE Insights™ is $495, WHITEGLOVE Consult is $995, WHITEGLOVE Heart Team is $1,495, and WHITEGLOVE Concierge is $2,495. Every option includes the two independent physician reviews and co-signed written report. The service is direct pay and WHITEGLOVEMD does not submit an insurance claim.

Does WHITEGLOVEMD replace my valve team?

No. WHITEGLOVEMD provides independent educational decision support and medical-record review. It does not diagnose, prescribe, perform procedures, provide emergency care, or replace the physicians responsible for your treatment.

Not emergency care.

Do not delay urgent or time-sensitive treatment while waiting for WHITEGLOVEMD. If you may be experiencing a medical emergency, call 911 immediately.

The decision stays yours

Before choosing a valve path, bring both sides of the decision to the table.

Tell us what you were told, what is already scheduled, and what still feels unclear.

Our team calls within 2 business hours. During business hours, a same-day conversation with a cardiac surgeon or cardiologist may be arranged only when clinically appropriate and a physician is available.