Intraoperative aortic dissection. |
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Authors: | R J Still A D Hilgenberg C W Akins W M Daggett M J Buckley |
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Affiliation: | Surgical Cardiovascular Unit, Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston 02114. |
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Abstract: | Intraoperative aortic dissection is a rare but potentially fatal complication of open heart operations. If the dissection is promptly recognized and repaired, however, the outcome may be significantly better. In this study, we reviewed the hospital records of patients with dissection of the aortic arch occurring as a complication of a cardiac operation at Massachusetts General Hospital and Mt. Auburn Hospital from January 1980 through June 1990. During this period, 14,877 surgical procedures with the use of cardiopulmonary bypass and aortic cannulation were performed, and 24 patients (0.16%) with iatrogenic aortic dissection were identified. Dissection was discovered intraoperatively in 20 patients and postoperatively after complications developed in 4. Of the 20 patients whose injuries were discovered intraoperatively and repaired, 4 (20%) died. Of the 4 whose injuries were discovered after operation, 2 (50%) died. The primary cause of death was ventricular dysfunction resulting from myocardial ischemia. Dissections originated at the aortic cannulation site in 10 patients, at the cross-clamp site in 8, at the site of the partial-occlusion clamp in 7, at the proximal anastomosis in 1 patient, and as a result of direct injury in 1. Three of these patients had simultaneous injuries at the aortic cannulation site and at the heel of the partial-occlusion clamp. Two techniques of repair were used: primary repair and patch or tube graft insertion. There were two deaths in the patients who underwent primary repair and four deaths in patients requiring graft replacement. Although it is uncommon, intraoperative aortic dissection can be a lethal complication of cardiac operations.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS) |
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