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The Journal of Thoracic and Cardiovascular Surgery, Vol 105, 781-788, Copyright © 1993 by The American Association for Thoracic Surgery and The Western Thoracic Surgical Association
AC Galloway, SB Colvin, EA Grossi, MA Parish, AT Culliford, T Asai, NM Rofsky, JC Weinreb, S Shapiro and FG Baumann
During an 8-year period (1984 to 1991) 66 patients (mean age 59 years,
range 26 to 84 years) with type A aortic dissection (60 ascending aorta
tears, 6 arch tears; 35 acute, 31 chronic) had surgical repair by a
continuous suture-graft inclusion technique. Hypothermic circulatory arrest
(16 degrees C) was used in 58 patients (35/35 acute, 23/31 chronic; mean
arrest time 26 minutes, range 10 to 55 minutes). Fifty- two patients had
hemiarch repair and 6 had total arch replacement. Aortic valve disease
necessitated treatment in 38 patients (1 valved conduit, 20 valve
replacements, 17 valve repairs). Recently 11 patients had valve repair by
reconstruction of the native aortic root, by means of techniques similar to
those used for homograft valve insertion. Operative mortality was 9% (14%
acute, 3% chronic). Stroke occurred in 2 patients (3%) and was fatal in
both. Variables suggestive of increased operative risk by univariate
analysis were acuteness (p = 0.12), visceral ischemia (p = 0.12), and
preoperative shock (p = 0.13). No variable was significant by multivariate
analysis. Overall actuarial survival at 48 months was 77%, with 3 late
deaths from a ruptured distal aneurysm. Late computed tomography or
magnetic resonance imaging scan was done in 28 patients at a mean interval
of 33 months. These studies identified 1 patient with a pseudoaneurysm
requiring reoperation and 3 patients with contained flow between the graft
and the wrap. Three patients required late operation: 1 for pseudoaneurysm,
1 for arch dissection, and 1 for repair of a distal aneurysm.
ARTICLES
Surgical repair of type A aortic dissection by the circulatory arrest- graft inclusion technique in sixty-six patients
Department of Surgery, New York University School of Medicine, New York.
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