36 research outputs found
Repair of stent graft-induced retrograde type A aortic dissection using the E-vita open prosthesis†
OBJECTIVES Stent graft-induced retrograde type A dissection is a life-threatening complication after endovascular treatment of acute aortic type B dissections. METHODS From August 2005 to February 2011, retrograde aortic dissection occurred in 4 of 29 patients (13.8%) undergoing thoracic endovascular aortic repair (TEVAR) for acute complicated aortic type B dissection. Three patients underwent emergent surgical conversion immediately after TEVAR. The operative strategy was a combined surgical and endovascular approach (frozen elephant trunk technique) using a specially designed hybrid prosthesis (Jotec E-vita open). All operations were performed under moderate hypothermia (25-28°C) and selective bilateral antegrade cerebral perfusion. The mean duration of circulatory arrest was 56±7min. Operative data and the outcome of surgery were analysed retrospectively. Data were analysed retrospectively in the limited number of patients. RESULTS All patients survived the surgical procedure. No stroke, paraplegia, renal failure or other major complications occurred. Postoperative CT scans revealed perigraft thrombus formation and stable aortic dimensions in all patients after 6 months. In one patient, the retrograde dissection remained primarily undetected and untreated. The patient died suddenly, with no clinical signs, within 7 days after stent graft implantation. Autopsy revealed cardiac tamponade due to retrograde type A aortic dissection. CONCLUSIONS Retrograde aortic dissection type A is a serious complication of thoracic endovascular repair of acute aortic type B dissection. Despite the small number of patients investigated in this study, the frozen elephant trunk technique appears to be a feasible bail-out strategy for the treatment of these acute aortic event
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Repair of stent graft-induced retrograde type A aortic dissection using the E-vita open prosthesis
Stent graft-induced retrograde type A dissection is a life-threatening complication after endovascular treatment of acute aortic type B dissections
Results of aortic valve replacement with the pulmonary autograft-A critical appraisal of the Ross operation
La sustitución de la válvula aórtica utilizando la propia válvula pulmonar del paciente, el autoinjerto pulmonar, conocida como intervención de Ross, ha visto aumentada su popularidad después de una adopción inicial lenta. Hoy día muchos cirujanos la consideran como intervención de elección en niños y pacientes jóvenes. Sin embargo, hay ciertas dudas sobre el comportamiento y resultados alejados tanto del autoinjerto como del homoinjerto utilizado para la reconstrucción del tracto de salida del ventrículo izquierdo.
En esta revisión se efectúa un análisis critico de los aspectos técnicos de la intervención y de sus modificaciones, se repasan los resultados disponibles de series amplias sobre niños y adultos incluyendo nuestros propios resultados y se discuten los problemas clave del procedimiento, el potencial de dilatación del autoinjerto en la circulación sistémica y la durabilidad del homoinjerto en el tracto de salida del ventrículo derecho.
Concluimos que la intervención de Ross ofrece una reparación duradera y eficaz en niños y adultos jóvenes
Long-Term Results with 187 Frozen Elephant Trunk Procedures
The frozen elephant trunk (FET) technique is an established therapeutic option in the treatment of complex aortic diseases. We report our long-term clinical outcomes after FET repair. A total of 187 consecutive patients underwent FET repair at our department between 8/2005 and 3/2023. Indications included acute and chronic aortic dissections and thoracic aneurysms. Endpoints included operative morbidity and mortality, long-term survival, and the need for reinterventions. Operative mortality, spinal cord injury and permanent stroke rates were: 9.6%, 2.7% and 10.2%, respectively. At five years, overall survival was 69.9 ± 3.9% and freedom from aortic-related death was 82.5 ± 3.0%, whereas at ten years, overall survival was 53.0 ± 5.5% and freedom from aortic-related death was 75.8 ± 4.8%. Sixty-one reinterventions on the thoracic aorta were necessary. Freedom from secondary interventions at ten years was 44.7 ± 6.4% overall (63.1 ± 10.0% for acute dissections, 40.8 ± 10.3% for chronic dissections and 28.9 ± 13.1% for aneurysms, respectively). The high reintervention rate for chronic dissections and for aneurysms is related to the pre-existing aortic pathology. Late aortic growth of untreated segments with potentially fatal outcome occurs even after ten years, so careful annual follow-up is mandatory in this patient cohort