Endovascular Treatment of Type B Thoracic Aortic Dissections

2003 
Purpose: To evaluate the initial experience of endovascular repair of aortic dissections from a single center. Materials and Methods: From June 1999 to March 2002, endovascular stent grafting was performed in 20 high-risk patients (16 to 80 years). Eighteen patients had a type B dissection (14 acute and 4 chronic). Two patients had chronic type A dissection. Preoperative work-up included CT and MRI to evaluate the extent of the dissection, the relation to the left subclavian artery, the size of false and true lumen, and branch complications. Results: Stent-graft deployment was technically successful in all cases. None was converted to open repair. Three patients died within 30 days, i.e., a 15% mortality rate. Four patients (20%) had a perioperative stroke. Paraplegia was observed in one case. No migration of the stent grafts or endoleaks was observed during the mean follow-up period of 13 months. In all but two patient thrombosis of the false lumen was noted. Conclusions: Endovascular treatment of thoracic dissections is feasible. Early results are encouraging. While endovascular repair with stent-grafts is progressing rapidly as a viable strategy for aortic dissections in selected patients careful investigations must continue to focus on its safety. Randomized controlled trials are urgently needed. (J Card Surg 2003;18:539-544)
    • Correction
    • Source
    • Cite
    • Save
    • Machine Reading By IdeaReader
    17
    References
    43
    Citations
    NaN
    KQI
    []