6 research outputs found

    Hybrid Approach in Acute and Chronic Aortic Disease

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    The management of patients with aortic disease that involves the ascending aorta, the aortic arch, and the descending aorta represent a surgical challenge. Open surgical repair remains the gold standard for aortic arch pathologies. However, this operation requires a cardiopulmonary bypass and a period of profound hypothermia and circulatory arrest, which carries a substantial rate of mortality and morbidity. For these reasons, hybrid arch repair that involves a combination of open surgery with endovascular aortic stent graft placement has been introduced as a therapeutic alternative for those patients deemed unfit for open surgical procedures. Hybrid repair requires varying degrees of invasiveness and can be performed as a single-stage procedure or as a two-stage procedure. The choice of the technique is multifactorial, depending on the characteristics of the diseased arch with regard to position of the stent graft proximal landing zone, patient fitness and comorbid status, as well as surgical expertise and hospital facilities. Among the evolving hybrid procedures is the so-called “frozen” or stented elephant trunk technique. Adapted from the classical elephant trunk technique, this approach facilitates the repair of a concomitant aortic arch and proximal descending aortic aneurysms in a single stage under circulatory arrest. This technique is increasingly being used to treat extensive thoracic aortic disease and has shown promising results

    A Decision-Support Informatics Platform for Minimally Invasive Aortic Valve Replacement

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    Minimally invasive aortic valve replacement is performed by mini-sternotomy (MS) or less invasive right anterior mini-thoracotomy (RT). The possibility of adopting RT is assessed by anatomical criteria derived from manual 2D image analysis. We developed a semi-automatic tool (RT-PLAN) to assess the criteria of RT, extract other parameters of surgical interest and generate a view of the anatomical region in a 3D space. Twenty-five 3D CT images from a dataset were retrospectively evaluated. The methodology starts with segmentation to reconstruct 3D surface models of the aorta and anterior rib cage. Secondly, the RT criteria and geometric information from these models are automatically and quantitatively evaluated. A comparison is made between the values of the parameters measured by the standard manual 2D procedure and our tool. The RT-PLAN procedure was feasible in all cases. Strong agreement was found between RT-PLAN and the standard manual 2D procedure. There was no difference between the RT-PLAN and the standard procedure when selecting patients for the RT technique. The tool developed is able to effectively perform the assessment of the RT criteria, with the addition of a realistic visualisation of the surgical field through virtual reality technology

    Hypothesis-free secretome analysis of thoracic aortic aneurysm reinforces the central role of TGF-b cascade in patients with bicuspid aortic valve

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    Background: Ascending thoracic aortic aneurysm (ATAA) is a major cause of morbidity and mortality worldwide. The pathogenesis of medial degeneration of the aorta remains undefined. High-throughput secretome analysis by mass spectrometry may be useful to elucidate the molecular mechanisms involved in aneurysm formation as well as to identify biomarkers for early diagnosis or targets of therapy. The purpose of the present study was to analyze the secreted/released proteins from ATAA specimens of both tricuspid aortic valve (TAV) and bicuspid aortic valve (BAV) patients. Methods: Aortic specimens were collected from patients undergoing elective surgery and requiring graft replacement of the ascending aorta. Each sample of the ascending aortic aneurysm, 4 BAV (3 males; aged 53.5 11.4 years) and 4 TAV (1 male; 78 7.5 years), was incubated for 24 h in serum-free medium. Released proteins were digested with trypsin. Peptide mixtures were fractioned by nano-high performance liquid chromatography and analyzed by mass spectrometry. Following identification of differentially expressed proteins, quantitative real time polymerase chain reaction (qRT-PCR) analysis was performed. Results: The comparison between the proteins released from BAV and TAV aneurysmatic tissues showed significantly diverging expression fingerprints in the two groups of patients. Bioinformatics analysis revealed 38 differentially released proteins; in particular 7 proteins were down-regulated while 31 were up-regulated in BAV with respect to TAV. Most of the proteins that were up-released in BAV were related to the activation of transforming growth factor (TGF)-b signaling. Latent TGF-b binding protein 4 (LTBP4) exhibited one of the highest significant under-expressions (10-fold change) in BAV secretomes with respect to TAV. qRT-PCR analysis validated this significant difference at LTBP4 gene level (BAV: 1.03 0.9 vs TAV: 3.6 3.2; p < 0.05). Conclusion: Hypothesis-free secretome profiling clearly showed diverging expression fingerprints in the ATAA of TAV and BAV patients, confirming the crucial role of TGF-b signaling in modulating ATAA development in bicuspid patients

    Unruptured Aneurysms Italian Study (UAIS) background and method

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    Treatment of unruptured cerebral aneurysms still represents an unsettled question in neurosurgical and neuroradiological communities. Although nowadays the indication for treatment have become relatively clear, indeed uncertainity remains for what concerns the proper treatment modality (surgical or endovascular) in terms of both the risk and the mid and long-term efficacy of the two procedures. The "Unruptured Aneurysms Italian Study" is a cooperative prospective study which aims to delineate the "State of the Art" in a nation based population. It has been designed: 1) to depict the nationwide modality of treatment of Unruptured Aneurysms, 2) to assess in the most objective way the overall treatment-related mortality and morbidity as well as the surgical and endovascular risk in the respective patient populations (it is not a surgical versus endovascular study) and 3) to asses the efficacy of the different procedures in the mid and long term periods. The study started on June 2003 and to June 2006, 637 patients have been enrolled. The study will end when the 1000th patient is enrolled
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