1.Ruptured Coronary Aneurysm with a Congenital Coronary Arteriovenous Fistula
Sachiko Kanki ; Mari Kakita ; Eiki Woo ; Tomoyasu Sasaki ; Masahiro Daimon ; Takahiro Katsumata
Japanese Journal of Cardiovascular Surgery 2015;44(4):198-202
An 83-year-old man was transferred to our hospital with cardiac tamponade and suspected cardiac tumor detected by enhanced CT. Coronary angiography showed a coronary aneurysm of 50 mm ID on the left circumflex artery. An emergency surgery was performed to excise the aneurysm, and a fresh thrombus occupying the efferent artery was observed. Both the afferent and efferent vessels were closed by suture. The patient made an otherwise uneventful recovery. This case featured a fresh red thrombus formed in fistulous outflow of the coronary aneurysm that seemed a direct cause of rupture.
2.An Aortic Arch Aneurysm Developing Late after a Non-anatomical Bypass Surgery for an Aortic Coarctation in Adulthood
Ryo Shimada ; Hayato Konishi ; Yoshikazu Motohashi ; Shinji Fukuhara ; Hiroaki Uchida ; Mari Kakita ; Sachiko Kanki ; Masahiro Daimon ; Hideki Ozawa ; Takahiro Katsumata
Japanese Journal of Cardiovascular Surgery 2013;42(3):207-210
A 48-year-old man underwent an non-anatomical bypass surgery for aortic coarctation when he was 38 years old, when a bypass laid between the left subclavian artery and the descending aorta with a prosthesis (10 mm, internal diameter). Four years after the first surgery, aortic aneurysms at the proximal and distal sites of the coarctation were detected. Six years from then, we decided to perform another surgery when the maximum diameters of the proximal and distal sites exceeded 60 and 47 mm, respectively. We performed the aortic replacement from the proximal left subclavian artery to the descending aorta at eighth thoracic vertebra. The approach to the aortic aneurysm was through the extended left thoracotomy with the transection of the sternum. The cardiopulmonary bypass was established with an antegrade aortic perfusion (from the ascending aorta) and drainage from the right atrium. The circulatory arrest was obtained under deep hypothermia at 20°C measured by deep body temperature. After the surgery, the pressure differences between upper and lower extremities decreased to 10 mmHg, which had been 40 mmHg before surgery. Macroscopic observation showed the coarctation site was completely obstructed by an old thrombus. From this observation, we surmise that one of the reasons for the aneurysmal formation at the proximal site of coarctation might be an insufficient depressurization by the non-anatomical bypass grafting from the left subclavian artery to the descending aorta at the first surgery. We consider that a severe coarctation might become thrombotic sooner or later after a non-anatomical bypass surgery due to a change of blood flow, and a radical anatomical surgery would be recommended for adult coarctation cases.
3.Two Cases of Pseudoaneurysms in Multiple Anastomotic Sites Occurring after the Original Bentall and Cabrol Procedure
Tomoyasu Sasaki ; Hayato Konishi ; Yoshikazu Motohashi ; Hiroaki Uchida ; Mari Kakita ; Eiki Woo ; Sachiko Kanki ; Masahiro Daimon ; Hideki Ozawa ; Takahiro Katsumata
Japanese Journal of Cardiovascular Surgery 2012;41(4):188-190
We report two cases of pseudoaneurysms occurring at the anastomotic sites that had to be repaired several times after the original Bentall and Cabrol procedure. Case 1. A 62-year-old man had surgery to repair pseudoaneurysms at the anastomotic sites of the distal ascending aorta and right coronary artery 22 years after undergoing the original Bentall procedure. The anastomosis of the left coronary artery was normal at the time of the operation ; however, he was given a diagnosis of a pseudoaneurysm at the anastomotic site of the left coronary artery 2 years after the operation. Case 2. A 61-year-old man with Marfan syndrome underwent surgery twice to repair pseudoaneurysms at the anastomotic sites of the aortic annulus and the left coronary artery 2 and 11 years, respectively, after the original Cabrol procedure. In addition, 23 years after the Cabrol procedure, he was given a diagnosis of a pseudoaneurysm at the anastomotic site of the distal ascending aorta. Their pseudoaneurysms were successfully treated by the reanastomosis of new grafts. Computed tomography detected no recurrence of the pseudoaneurysm in the follow-up period. However, continual close observation for the recurrence of a pseudoaneurysm in the remaining anastomotic sites is necessary.