1.An elephant trunk stent graft strayed into the false lumen leading to a death during the Sun's operation: A case report.
Fushuo ZHOU ; Hong CHAI ; Ruisheng LIU ; Bing SONG
Journal of Central South University(Medical Sciences) 2021;46(2):217-220
Type A aortic dissection (AD) is a critical and severe disease with high mortality. The Sun's operation is a standard surgical method for this kind of disease at present. For the procedure, an elephant trunk stent is inserted into the true lumen of the descending aorta and the aortic arch is replaced. A patient was admitted to the First Hospital of Lanzhou University due to sudden chest and back pain for 6 days. Computed tomography angiography (CTA) showed type A AD. Ascending aorta replacement, Sun's operation, and ascending aorta to right femoral artery bypass grafting were performed. After surgery, the patient's condition was worsened. The digital subtraction angiography (DSA) showed the elephant trunk stent was inserted into the false lumen of AD, leading to the occlusion of the large blood vessel at the distal part of the abdominal aorta and below. Although we performed intima puncture and endovascular aortic repair, the patient was still dead.
Aneurysm, Dissecting/surgery*
;
Aorta, Abdominal
;
Aorta, Thoracic/surgery*
;
Blood Vessel Prosthesis Implantation/adverse effects*
;
Humans
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Stents/adverse effects*
;
Treatment Outcome
2.Application of branch-first technique in total thoracic aorta replacement: short and medium term effect of 11 cases.
Xiao Qing YAN ; Gang WU ; Shuai LIU ; Jian Hua LIU ; Ping Fan WANG ; Rui Cheng ZHANG
Chinese Journal of Surgery 2022;60(11):1018-1022
Objective: To examine the short and medium term effect of branch-first technique in total thoracic aorta replacement. Methods: The clinical data of eleven patients with ascending aortic aneurysms or type A aortic dissection+Crawford Ⅰ or Ⅱ total thoracoabdominal aortic aneurysm who were treated at Department of Cardiovascular Surgery in Henan Province Chest Hospital from January 2018 to July 2021 were retrospectively analyzed. There were 7 males and 4 females, aging (38±5) years (range: 28 to 45 years), 7 cases of whom were diagnosed with Marfan syndrome, 1 case was diagnosed with coarctation of aorta. Operations were performed under mild hypothermic and branch-first technique. Firstly, the middle and small incision in the chest was combined with the 6th intercostal incision in the left posterior lateral side. Secondly, four branches artificial blood vessels were anastomosed with the brachiocephalic artery to ensure the blood supply to the brain. After the circulation was blocked, intracardiac and aortic proximal operations were performed. Intercostal artery reconstruction and thoracic descending aorta replacement were completed after opening circulation. Results: The operative time of this group was (645.9±91.7) minutes (range: 505 to 840 minutes). One case had cerebral infarction and 1 case had chylothorax. The patients were followed up 4 to 47 months, 1 patient underwent thoracic and abdominal aorta+iliac artery resection and replacement due to the progression of abdominal aortic aneurysm 3 months after operation. Intercostal artery obstruction occurred in 2 cases, and the rest lived well. Conclusions: One-stage whole thoracic aorta replacement with branch-first technique has satisfactory results in the short and medium term, with no risk of residual aortic aneurysm rupture. It is an effective treatment for young and organs function well patients with complex aortic lesions.
Male
;
Female
;
Humans
;
Aorta, Thoracic/surgery*
;
Retrospective Studies
;
Aortic Aneurysm, Thoracic/surgery*
;
Aortic Dissection/surgery*
;
Aorta, Abdominal/surgery*
;
Blood Vessel Prosthesis Implantation
3.Diaphragmatic Hernia as a Complication of Pedicled Omentoplasty.
Chan Sik YUN ; Jae Il JUNG ; Jae Wuk KIM ; Bon Il KU ; Hong Sup LEE
The Korean Journal of Thoracic and Cardiovascular Surgery 2001;34(12):968-971
Pedicled omentoplasty is effective in thoracic surgery, but it is associated with several postoperative complications. A case of diaphragmatic hernia as a complication of pedicled omentoplasty in a 65-year-old male is reported. Because aortoesophageal fistula occurred three months after the patch aortoplasty for mycotic aneurysm of descending thoracic aorta, he underwent ascending thoracic aorta to abdominal aorta bypass surgery with resection of thoracic aortic aneurysm and esophagorrhaphy with wrapping of the esophageal suture line and the stumps of aorta with pedicled omental flap. Three years after the operation, herniation of the stomach developed. The pedicled omental flap was ligated and divided, and the diaphragm defect was repaired.
Aged
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Aneurysm, Infected
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Aorta
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Aorta, Abdominal
;
Aorta, Thoracic
;
Aortic Aneurysm, Thoracic
;
Diaphragm
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Fistula
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Hernia, Diaphragmatic*
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Humans
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Male
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Postoperative Complications
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Stomach
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Surgical Flaps
;
Sutures
;
Thoracic Surgery
4.Experiences of retroperitoneal approach for aortoiliac reconstruction.
Bao-zhong YANG ; Qing-hua WU ; Yan-min HAN ; Zhong CHEN ; Xin HUO
Chinese Journal of Surgery 2005;43(14):926-928
OBJECTIVETo summarize experiences of aortoiliac reconstruction through retroperitoneal approach.
METHODSTwenty-eight patients underwent retroperitoneal aortoiliac reconstructions, including aortic aneurysmectomy with graft replacement, aortic endarterectomy with patch angioplasty, thoraco-abdominal aortic bypass, resection of retroperitoneal mass with ilio-femoral bypass, iliac aneurysmectomy with aorto-external iliac artery bypass, removal of aortoiliac foreign body, common iliac endarterectomy, aorto (ilio)-femeral bypass and common ilio-femo-popliteal bypass. Drainage tubes were placed retroperitoneally in 24 cases.
RESULTSAll operations in this group were successful without perioperative death. The volume of intra-operative bleeding was 100-400 ml (mean 240 ml). Blood transfusion were employed in 2 cases. Retroperitoneal drainage was 50-170 ml (mean 85 ml). Naso-gastric tubes were removed 28 h on average after operation. All patients recovered uneventfully except that cardiac insufficiency, stress ulcer and retroperitoneal hematoma were present in 3 patients respectively. Twenty-two patients were followed up from 3 months to 2.5 years. One patient died of AMI 2 years after operation. One patient receiving ilio-femo-popliteal bypass was found to have occlusion of femo-popliteal segment of prosthetic graft. One patient developed brain hemorrhage 1.5 years postoperatively. All the other followed-up patients were living well.
CONCLUSIONRetroperitoneal approach, not violating the peritoneal cavity, offers certain physiological advantages associated with minimal disturbance of gastrointestinal and respiratory function, thereby decreasing respiratory complications and postoperative ileus, avoiding intra-abdominal adhesions with their attendant risk of early and late small bowel obstruction. It proved to be a simple and safe alternative for surgical treatment of aortoiliac diseases.
Adult ; Aged ; Aorta, Abdominal ; surgery ; Aortic Aneurysm, Abdominal ; surgery ; Arterial Occlusive Diseases ; surgery ; Endarterectomy ; Female ; Femoral Artery ; surgery ; Humans ; Iliac Aneurysm ; surgery ; Iliac Artery ; surgery ; Male ; Middle Aged ; Retroperitoneal Space ; surgery ; Retrospective Studies ; Treatment Outcome ; Vascular Surgical Procedures ; methods
5.Effect of lower limb amputation level on aortic hemodynamics: a numerical study.
Junru WEI ; Zhongyou LI ; Junjie DIAO ; Xiao LI ; Lei MIN ; Wentao JIANG ; Fei YAN
Journal of Biomedical Engineering 2022;39(1):67-74
It has been found that the incidence of cardiovascular disease in patients with lower limb amputation is significantly higher than that in normal individuals, but the relationship between lower limb amputation and the episodes of cardiovascular disease has not been studied from the perspective of hemodynamics. In this paper, numerical simulation was used to study the effects of amputation on aortic hemodynamics by changing peripheral impedance and capacitance. The final results showed that after amputation, the aortic blood pressure increased, the time averaged wall shear stress of the infrarenal abdominal aorta decreased and the oscillatory shear index of the left and right sides was asymmetrically distributed, while the time averaged wall shear stress of the iliac artery decreased and the oscillatory shear index increased. The changes above were more significant with the increase of amputation level, which will result in a higher incidence of atherosclerosis and abdominal aortic aneurysm. These findings preliminarily revealed the influence of lower limb amputation on the occurrence of cardiovascular diseases, and provided theoretical guidance for the design of rehabilitation training and the optimization of cardiovascular diseases treatment.
Amputation
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Aorta, Abdominal/surgery*
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Aortic Aneurysm, Abdominal/surgery*
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Blood Flow Velocity/physiology*
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Hemodynamics/physiology*
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Humans
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Lower Extremity
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Models, Cardiovascular
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Stress, Mechanical
6.Effect of Microsurgery Training Program for Hepatic Artery Reconstruction in Liver Transplantation.
Weiguang XU ; Bong Wan KIM ; Byong Ku BAE ; Hee Jung WANG ; Myung Wook KIM
Korean Journal of Hepato-Biliary-Pancreatic Surgery 2010;14(1):25-29
PURPOSE: During liver transplantation (LT), complications of the hepatic artery have been decreased because of microsurgery in reconstruction of hepatic artery has been widely adopted. However, in an early step of the LT program, hepatic artery reconstruction generally tends to be done with the help of a micro-surgeon from the the plastic surgery in most of Korean medical centers. In our center, we also have done reconstruction of the hepatic artery using a microscope and the skills of a plastic surgeon. We did this between Feb, 2005 and Jun, 2008 for liver transplantations. The increased the need for micro-surgeons in liver surgery as increased the cases of liver transplantation steadily. After training general surgeons of the surgical department who had no experience with microsurgery, we invested in the micro-surgery of hepatic artery reconstruction. Here we report the result of that investment. METHODS: Liver transplant patients (n=176) were enrolled between Feb, 2005 and Jul, 2009. Between Jul, 2008 and Jul, 2009, 28 cases of reconstruction of the hepatic artery were done by a general surgeon who had micro-surgery training. Before training in hepatic artery reconstruction, the general surgeon spent 3 months being introduced to micro-surgery in the micro animal laboratory. Because the training was repeated, the surgeon became skilled in doing artery anastomosis using rat's abdominal aorta. At the same time, we trained a plastic surgeon to do hepatic artery reconstruction during liver transplantation as the first assistant. From Jul, 2008 to the present time, the general surgeon was exclusively in charge of hepatic artery reconstruction during liver transplantation. Hepatic artery reconstruction was done using a microscope. Stitching was done using 8-0 or 9-0 nylon, and an interrupted end-to-end anastomosis was done. After hepatic artery reconstruction, artery flow was confirmed by ultrasonic doppler. For group A patients, left lobe grafts were used in 33, right lobe grafts in 73, dual grafts in 6, and whole liver grafts in 36. RESULTS: For group B patients, left lobe grafts were used in 1 and right lobe grafts in 21, while whole liver grafts were used in 6. In Group A, hepatic artery complications occurred in 5 cases (3.3%), and in Group B such complications did not occur (0%). There was no statistical difference (p=0.312). CONCLUSION: For hepatic artery reconstruction, during micro-surgery under a surgical microscope, it is thought that it is best to invest in a general surgeon who has been trained in micro-surgery. We suggest that a general surgeon is suitable for hepatic artery reconstruction after only a short time of micro surgery training.
Animals
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Aorta, Abdominal
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Arteries
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Fees and Charges
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Hepatic Artery
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Humans
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Investments
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Liver
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Liver Transplantation
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Microsurgery
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Nylons
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Surgery, Plastic
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Transplants
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Ultrasonics
7.Meta-analysis of safety and efficacy on paraaortic lymphadenectomy in gastric cancer.
Xiao-sheng HE ; Xiao-jian WU ; Jian-ping WANG ; Yi-feng ZOU ; Ping LAN
Chinese Journal of Gastrointestinal Surgery 2010;13(2):119-124
OBJECTIVETo evaluate the safety and efficacy of paraaortic lymphadenectomy in gastric cancer with meta-analysis.
METHODSRandomized controlled trial comparing D(2)/D(3) and D(2)/D(3) plus paraaortic lymphadenectomy in gastric cancer were identified by two investigators after search strategy was established. Seven randomized controlled trials with 1446 cases were included in this meta-analysis. Fixed effect model or random model was separately used to evaluate the safety and efficacy of paraaortic lymphadenectomy in gastric cancer.
RESULTSTotal complication rate in the D(2)/D(3) plus paraaortic lymphadenectomy group was significantly higher than that in the D(2)/D(3) group (RR 1.34, 95% CI 1.03-1.75, P=0.03), while surgery associated complication between the two groups was almost the same. Lymphorrhea and severe diarrhea was more common in the D(2)/D(3) plus paraaortic lymphadenectomy (RR 16.23 and 9.56, 95% CI 1.99-131.98 and 1.70-53.67, respectively). Anastomotic leak, pancreatic fistula, abdominal abscess, ileus, postoperative bleeding and wound infection were similar. There were no advantages in operating time, amount of blood transfusion, in-hospital stay, reoperation, recurrence and 5-year survival favoring the paraaortic lymphadenectomy group except intra-operative blood loss and rate of blood transfusion (WMD 202.95, 95% CI 116.80-289.10; RR 1.93, 95% CI 1.20-3.10).
CONCLUSIONSParaaortic lymphadenectomy is associated with increased total complication without altering postoperative recurrence and survival. Strict large-scale multicenter controlled trials with long-term follow-up are required.
Aorta, Abdominal ; Humans ; Lymph Node Excision ; adverse effects ; Postoperative Complications ; Randomized Controlled Trials as Topic ; Stomach Neoplasms ; surgery
8.Endovascular repair of infrarenal abdominal aortic aneurysm with the complex aortic anatomy.
Chang SHU ; Jian QIU ; Xiao-lei HU ; Tun WANG ; Quan-ming LI ; Ming LI
Chinese Journal of Surgery 2011;49(10):903-906
OBJECTIVETo explore the safety and efficiency of endovascular repair (EVAR) of abdominal aortic aneurysms (AAAs) which have the complex aortic anatomy.
METHODSThe clinical date of 48 AAA patients with complex aortic anatomy treated by EVAR from January 2003 to March 2011 was retrospectively analyzed. There were 37 male and 11 female patients, aged from 50 to 81 years with a mean of 71.4 years. Fourteen patients had short aortic neck (< 15 mm), 13 patients had severe infrarenal angulation (> 60°), 15 patients had severely tortuous iliac, 6 patients had small iliac (< 8 mm). The stent-grafts were deployed by both femoral arteries to treat the AAA.
RESULTThe primary technical success rate was 100%. The perioperative survival rate was 100%. Intraoperative angiograms revealed two type I endoleaks, in which one disappeared in two weeks, another existed. Follow-up was available in 40 patients with a median of 63 months (4 to 122 months). During the follow-up period, 2 patients died with no relationship to the procedures. The rest patients survived well. The accumulative survival rate was 95.8%. There were no new endoleak, stent-graft migration, aneurysm expansion, or secondary intervention during the follow-up time.
CONCLUSIONSEVAR is safety and efficiency to treat the patient of infrarenal abdominal aortic aneurysm with the complex aortic anatomy. By the accumulation of experience, EVAR will play a more important role for these patients.
Aged ; Aged, 80 and over ; Aorta, Abdominal ; anatomy & histology ; Aortic Aneurysm, Abdominal ; surgery ; Blood Vessel Prosthesis Implantation ; methods ; Female ; Humans ; Male ; Middle Aged ; Retrospective Studies ; Stents ; Treatment Outcome
9.Uninfected Para-Anastomotic Aneurysms after Infrarenal Aortic Grafting.
Paolo BIANCHI ; Giovanni NANO ; Francesco CUSMAI ; Fabio RAMPONI ; Silvia STEGHER ; Daniela DELL'AGLIO ; Giovanni MALACRIDA ; Domenico G TEALDI
Yonsei Medical Journal 2009;50(2):227-238
PURPOSE: This single-institution retrospective review examines the management of uninfected para-anastomotic aneurysms of the abdominal aorta (PAAA), developed after infrarenal grafting. MATERIALS AND METHODS: From October 1979 to November 2005, 31 PAAA were observed in our Department. Twenty-six uninfected PAAA of degenerative etiology, including 24 false and 2 true aneurysms, were candidates for intervention and retrospectively included in our database for management and outcome evaluation. Six (23%) patients were treated as emergencies. Surgery included tube graft interposition (n = 12), new reconstruction (n = 8), and graft removal with extra-anatomic bypass (n = 3). Endovascular management (n = 3) consisted of free-flow tube endografts. RESULTS: The mortality rate among the elective and emergency cases was 5% and 66.6%, respectively (p = 0.005). The morbidity rate in elective cases was 57.8%, whereas 75% in emergency cases (p = 0.99). The survival rate during the follow-up was significantly higher for elective cases than for emergency cases. CONCLUSION: Uninfected PAAA is a late complication of aortic grafting, tends to evolve silently and is difficult to diagnose. The prevalence is underestimated and increases with time since surgery. The mortality rate is higher among patients treated as an emergency than among patients who undergo elective surgery, therefore, elective treatment and aggressive management in the case of pseudoaneurysm are the keys to obtain a good outcome. Endovascular treatment could reduce mortality. Patients who undergo infrarenal aortic grafting require life-long surveillance after surgery.
Aged
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Aneurysm, False/surgery
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Aneurysm, Infected/pathology/*surgery
;
Aorta, Abdominal/pathology/surgery
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Aortic Aneurysm, Abdominal/*surgery
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*Blood Vessel Prosthesis Implantation
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Female
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Humans
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Male
;
Middle Aged
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Retrospective Studies
;
Treatment Outcome
10.Standardization of rat stable orthotopic liver transplantation model and comparison of the effect of two liver graft perfusion methods.
Chi XU ; Yang YANG ; Shu-hong YI ; Xi LI ; Qi ZHANG ; Gui-hua CHEN
Journal of Southern Medical University 2006;26(11):1556-1558
OBJECTIVETo standardize the establishment of a stable rat model of orthotopic liver transplantation and surgical technique of two-cuff technique for improving the operation success rate, and compare the effect of graft perfusion via the portal vein and the abdominal aorta on the graft function.
METHODSTotally 100 cases of orthotopic liver transplantation was performed in rats under microscope according to modified Kamada's two cuff technique. The rats were divided into 2 groups with the donor liver perfused through the portal vein with 10 ml cold lactated Ringer's solution, and via the abdominal aorta with 20 ml cold lactated Ringer's solution, respectively. The postoperative function recovery and pathological changes of the liver grafts were evaluated by serum ALT detection and histopathological examination. The operation success rate, 3-month survival rate of the rats and the complications were observed.
RESULTSNo significant differences was noted in the liver function, operation success rate and 3-month survival rate between the 2 groups, and histopathological examination also showed similar findings. The success rates of the two groups were 98% and 96%, with 3-month survival rate of 93.5% (29/31) and 93.3% (28/30) (P>0.05), respectively.
CONCLUSIONThe liver transplantation models with portal vein or abdominal aorta graft perfusion both serve well their respective purposes. Good microsurgical skills, standardized performance and shortened anhepatic period are the keys to improved stability and survival rate and reduced operative complications.
Animals ; Aorta, Abdominal ; surgery ; Liver ; blood supply ; Liver Transplantation ; methods ; mortality ; Male ; Models, Animal ; Portal Vein ; surgery ; Rats ; Rats, Wistar ; Survival Rate