In some cases, your doctor may just want to closely watch the heart valve problem for a period of time. If you need treatment, the treatment depends on the type of heart valve disease you have. It may include:
Medicines
Medicines are not a cure for heart valve disease. But they can often ease symptoms. Beta-blockers, digoxin, and calcium channel blockers help to control heart rate and stop abnormal heart rhythms. Other medicines, such as diuretics or vasodilators, can help control blood pressure. These medicines may not work if you have a narrowed heart valve. Sometimes they can make symptoms worse. If the valve won't open, you may need surgery, valvuloplasty, or transcatheter replacement.
Surgery
You may need surgery to fix or replace the valve that isn't working right. In many cases, repair is better because your own tissues are used. When heart valves are severely malformed or destroyed, they may need to be replaced with a new valve. Replacement valves may be tissue (biologic) valves. These include animal valves and donated human valves. Or they may be mechanical valves. These are made of metal, plastic, or another artificial material.
Transcatheter procedures
These are less invasive procedures. The doctor replaces the heart valves. It's done through an artery (for the aortic valve) or a vein (for the tricuspid, pulmonary, or mitral valve) and is often performed from the groin.
Heart valve repair
This repair is done on the mitral and tricuspid valve. A clip can be used to reduce the amount blood from leaking through these valves.
Balloon valvuloplasty
For this nonsurgical procedure, a special hollow tube is put into a blood vessel in the groin and guided into the heart. At the tip of the catheter is a deflated balloon that is inserted into the narrowed heart valve. Once in place, the balloon is inflated to stretch the valve open, and then removed. This procedure is only used to treat stenotic (narrowed) valves.
TAVR (transcatheter aortic valve replacement)
For this nonsurgical procedure, a new aortic valve is placed inside the older narrowed valve. This is done using catheters, balloons, and wires inserted through the arteries of the groin. Or in some cases, they may be inserted through the arteries of the arms or the apex of the heart. This procedure is currently used mostly for aortic stenosis, although it is being studied for use for aortic regurgitation.