5 research outputs found

    Repair of calcified left ventricular pseudoaneurysm of long duration

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    Cardiac pseudoaneurysm is a contained rupture of the myocardium limited by pericardial adhesions or the epicardial wall. Cardiac pseudoaneurysm may cause sudden death with a mortality of 30-45% in the first year, mostly resulting from rupture. Coronal and axial T2-weighted magnetic resonance images of a 65-year-old male patient admitted with dyspnoea, coughing and chest pain, present for the last 10 days, revealed a large pseudoaneursym of the left ventricle. Coronary bypass and left ventricular restoration operation was performed. The patient was eventlessly discharged 8 days after operation. He is in NYHA Class I 21 months postoperatively. The interval between myocardial insult and establishment of diagnosis is unknown in our patient. This is a patient whose left ventricular rupture had been contained for a very long time, possibly years, because a heavily calcified thick pseudoaneurysm wall was encountered during operation, making this case rare in the literature

    Superficial Femoral Artery Pseudoaneurysm in a Child Which Developed After Femur Fracture

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    Pseudoaneurysm of the superficial femoral artery after a traumatic fracture of the femur is rarely seen. In the present study, we reported treatment with endovascular embolization and surgery in a 9-year-old male patient in whom superficial femoral artery pseudoaneurysm which developed after traumatic, comminuted femoral distal diaphyseal fracture

    Open Surgical Repair After Endovascular Treatment with Endologix Stent Graft: A Case Report

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    Endovascular treatment of abdominal aortic aneurysm repair is increasingly being used today. We report a 72-year-old male patient who underwent open surgical repair due to separation of Intu Trak Powerlink XL (Endologix) endovascular stent graft four months after endovascular intervention for abdominal aortic aneurysm with 9.5 cm diameter

    Evaluation of Coronary Artery-Saphenous Vein Composite Grafts: The Aortic No-Touch Technique

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    We retrospectively compared the results of conventional coronary artery bypass grafting (CABG) performed on patients who showed no preoperative evidence of serious atherosclerosis of the ascending aorta with the results of the aortic no-touch technique (using coronary artery-saphenous vein composite grafts) on CABG patients who did show such evidence. From 2003 through 2012, 3,152 consecutive patients underwent isolated primary CABG at our hospital. We chose 360 for the current study. The study group (n=120) comprised patients who had undergone operation via the aortic no-touch technique. Propensity-score-matching (1: 2) was used to select the control group of 240 patients who had undergone conventional CABG. Early and late survival rates, reintervention-free survival rates, and freedom from cardiac death were compared. Early and late mortality rates were similar in the study and control groups (P=0.19 vs P=0.29, respectively), as were cardiac-related death (2.5% vs 2.1%, respectively; P=0.53) and overall death (8.3% vs 7.9%, respectively; P=0.51). Overall survival rates were 91.7% vs 92.1% and freedom-from-cardiac-death rates were 97.4% vs 97.5% (P=0.71 vs P=0.78, respectively; mean follow-up period, 5.27 +/- 2.51 yr). Reintervention-free survival rates were also similar (96.7% vs 98.8%, respectively; P=0.2). As a result of the similar rates of early and late survival, reintervention-free survival, and freedom from cardiac death, we conclude that the aortic no-touch technique with composite grafts might be a reasonable option in patients who have atherosclerotic ascending aorta that cannot be clamped
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