1. Acute aortic occlusion due to false-lumen expansion after repair of abdominal aortic rupture in type B acute aortic dissection.
- Author
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Yamamoto H, Yamamoto F, Izumoto H, Shiroto K, Tanaka F, Yamaura G, Motokawa M, and Ishibashi K
- Subjects
- Accidents, Traffic, Acute Disease, Aged, Aortic Dissection complications, Aortic Dissection diagnostic imaging, Aortic Aneurysm, Abdominal complications, Aortic Aneurysm, Abdominal diagnostic imaging, Aortic Diseases diagnostic imaging, Aortic Diseases surgery, Aortic Rupture diagnostic imaging, Aortic Rupture etiology, Aortography methods, Arterial Occlusive Diseases diagnostic imaging, Arterial Occlusive Diseases surgery, Blood Vessel Prosthesis, Blood Vessel Prosthesis Implantation instrumentation, Fatal Outcome, Hematoma etiology, Hematoma surgery, Humans, Male, Polyethylene Terephthalates, Prosthesis Design, Reoperation, Tomography, X-Ray Computed, Treatment Outcome, Aortic Dissection surgery, Aortic Aneurysm, Abdominal surgery, Aortic Diseases etiology, Aortic Rupture surgery, Arterial Occlusive Diseases etiology, Blood Vessel Prosthesis Implantation adverse effects
- Abstract
We describe a patient with aortic occlusion due to false-lumen expansion after repair of abdominal aortic rupture in acute type B aortic dissection. A 70-year-old man presented to a nearby hospital with severe lower back pain, and was subsequently referred to our hospital with a diagnosis of abdominal aortic rupture. Computed tomography scanning on admission revealed type B aortic dissection with concomitant false-lumen rupture at the level of pre-existing infrarenal abdominal aortic aneurysm. The patient underwent abdominal aortic replacement with the true lumen reconstructed using a bifurcated knitted Dacron graft. On postoperative day 2, the patient developed severe lower body ischemia. Computed tomography scanning revealed complete true-lumen occlusion at the renal artery level because of false-lumen expansion. The patient underwent open fenestration by opening the bulging flap with a transverse graftotomy distal to the proximal graft anastomosis. After fenestration, the patient developed severe metabolic complications (i.e., myonephropathic-metabolic syndrome) and died a day later of cardiac arrest resulting from hyperkalemia. Abdominal aortic replacement with true-lumen reconstruction in patients with abdominal aortic rupture in type B acute aortic dissection could also lead to acute aortic occlusion due to re-dissection or true-lumen compromise accompanying retrograde propagation of false-lumen thrombosis. This lethal sequela after true-lumen reconstruction might be prevented by an adjuvant procedure such as concomitant fenestration., (Copyright © 2010 Annals of Vascular Surgery Inc. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2010
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