1. Who needs their descending thoracic aorta anyway? Extra-anatomic bypass for aorto-bronchial fistula after TEVAR.
- Author
-
Newman JS, Pupovac SS, Scheinerman SJ, Tseng JC, Hemli JM, and Brinster DR
- Subjects
- Humans, Female, Middle Aged, Aorta, Thoracic surgery, Endovascular Aneurysm Repair, Hemoptysis etiology, Hemoptysis surgery, Stents adverse effects, Treatment Outcome, Bronchial Fistula etiology, Bronchial Fistula surgery, Aortic Diseases etiology, Aortic Diseases surgery, Blood Vessel Prosthesis Implantation adverse effects, Blood Vessel Prosthesis Implantation methods, Endovascular Procedures adverse effects, Endovascular Procedures methods, Vascular Fistula etiology, Vascular Fistula surgery
- Abstract
Background: Aortobronchial fistula after TEVAR remains a vexing clinical problem associated with high mortality. Although a combination of endovascular and open surgical strategies have been reported in managing this pathology, there is as yet no definitive treatment algorithm that can be used for all patients. We discuss our approach to an aortobronchial fistula associated with an overtly infected aortic endograft., Case Presentation: A 49-year-old female sustained a traumatic aortic transection 14 years prior, managed by an endovascular stent-graft. Due to persistent endoleak, she underwent open replacement of her descending thoracic aorta 4 years later. Ten years after her open aortic surgery, the patient presented with hemoptysis, and a pseudoaneurysm at her distal aortic suture line was identified on computed tomography, whereupon she underwent placement of an endograft. Eight weeks later, she presented with dyspnea, recurrent hemoptysis, malaise and fever, with clinical and radiographic evidence of an aortobronchial communication and an infected aortic stent-graft. The patient underwent management via a two-stage open surgical approach, constituting an extra-anatomic bypass from her ascending aorta to distal descending aorta and subsequent radical excision of her descending aorta with all associated infected prosthetic material and repair of the airway., Conclusion: Aortobronchial fistula after TEVAR represents a challenging complex clinical scenario. Extra-anatomic aortic bypass followed by radical debridement of all contaminated tissue may provide the best option for durable longer-term outcomes., (© 2023. BioMed Central Ltd., part of Springer Nature.)
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF