A treatment for bioprosthetic tissue used in implants or for assembled
bioprosthetic heart valves to reduce in vivo calcification. The method
includes applying a calcification mitigant such as a capping agent or an
antioxidant to the tissue to specifically inhibit oxidation in tissue.
Also, the method can be used to inhibit oxidation in dehydrated tissue.
The capping agent suppresses the formation of binding sites in the tissue
that are exposed or generated by the oxidation and otherwise would, upon
implant, attract calcium, phosphate, immunogenic factors, or other
precursors to calcification. In one method, tissue leaflets in assembled
bioprosthetic heart valves are pretreated with an aldehyde capping agent
prior to dehydration and sterilization.