1.A Case of Endovascular Aortic Repair with a Vascular Embolic Device and Stent-Graft for the Anastomotic Pseudoaneurysm in the Ascending Aorta
Soichi Asano ; Naoki Hayashida ; Masanao Ohba ; Kozo Matsuo ; Hiroyuki Kito ; Nobuyuki Hirose ; Takuto Maruyama ; Masashi Kabasawa ; Hideomi Hasegawa ; Hirokazu Murayama
Japanese Journal of Cardiovascular Surgery 2016;45(5):238-241
We report a case of a 72-year-old woman, who had an anastomotic pseudoaneurysm in the ascending aorta, successfully treated by endovascular aortic repair with vascular embolic devise and stent-graft. It seemed to be high risk to achieve conventional surgery with extracorporeal circulation, therefore we selected endovascular treatment because she had a bleeding tendency which derived from disseminated intravascular coagulation. Then, we adopted stent-grafting with a vascular embolic device, because the distal side of pseudoaneurysm had too short a landing zone to cover the stent-graft only. The patient well tolerated this procedure and her postoperative course was uneventful. The pseudoaneurysm shrank at 6th months after operation.
2.Descending Aortic Replacement for Pseudoaneurysm Following Total Arch Replacement with Proximal Endoclamping Using an Occlusion Balloon
Nobuyuki HIROSE ; Hideaki NISHIMORI ; Takashi FUKUTOMI ; Masaki YAMAMOTO ; Kazuki KIHARA ; Miwa TASHIRO ; Kazumasa ORIHASHI
Japanese Journal of Cardiovascular Surgery 2018;47(4):187-191
An 83-year-old man who had undergone aortic arch repair using the elephant trunk technique in addition to abdominal aorta repair required surgical intervention for a pseudoaneurysm at the distal anastomosis of the aortic arch graft. Due to marked adhesion around the aneurysm, aortic cross-clamping was not feasible. Thus, under femoro-femoral partial bypass, the arch prosthesis was endoclamped using an aortic occlusion balloon inserted through the left femoral artery into the aortic arch graft and through the elephant trunk, guided by fluoroscopy and transesophageal echocardiography. This allowed descending aorta replacement with minimal bleeding. His postoperative course was uneventful. This technique enabled safe and bloodless clamping of the proximal portion of the aortic arch graft.