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The Journal of Thoracic and Cardiovascular Surgery, Vol 81, 61-68, Copyright © 1981 by The American Association for Thoracic Surgery and The Western Thoracic Surgical Association
K Turley, DJ Ullyot, JD Godwin, JM Wilson, M Lipton, E Carlsson and PA Ebert
During the period 1975 to 1980, 21 patients with thoracic aortic
dissections underwent surgical treatment. The operative technique was
resection and tube graft replacement of the segment of the aorta containing
the entry point into the false channel. Eleven Type A and 10 Type B
dissections were resected. The hospital survival rate was 95%. The single
operative death occurred in a patient with an acute Type A dissection.
Three patients had total resection of the dissected segment; three had
clotted false lumina; five had distal anastomosis to true and false lamina;
and 10 had distal anastomosis to the true lumen only, with proximal entry
into the false lumen obliterated by incorporating both intimal and
adventitial walls in a single suture line. The late survival rate was 95%
(mean 32 months, range 8 to 63 months). No late ruptures occurred. Computed
tomography (CT) with contrast enhancement was used to evaluate the aorta
and any residual false lumen at follow-up. Seven of eight patients in whom
obliteration was attempted and CT scans performed demonstrated persistence
of false lumen perfusion; in six of the eight, preoperative angiograms were
adequate for evaluation of false lumen runoff. Major vessels arose from the
false lumen in all cases, except in the one patient in whom obliteration
was later successful. This report demonstrates that there is persistence of
false lumen perfusion in patients in whom obliteration is attempted, and
the mechanism of this persistence is the presence of major vessel runoff.
It suggests that the mechanism by which long-term survival is achieved is
by resection of the segment of aorta containing the entry site, which is
frequently the site of subsequent enlargement and rupture, rather than
obliteration of the false channel.
ARTICLES
Repair of dissection of the thoracic aorta. Evaluation of false lumen utilizing computed tomography
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