Successful surgical repair of delayed chronic type a dissection after previous coronary artery bypass grafting. |
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Authors: | Kazuhiko Nishizaki Toshio Seki Takehisa Abe |
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Institution: | The Department of Cardiovascular Surgery, Nara Prefectural Mimuro Hospital, Nara, Japan. |
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Abstract: | This reports a case of a 68-year-old woman who had undergone coronary artery bypass 5 years previously. Magnetic resonance angiography (MRA) revealed that the ascending aorta was dilated to about 8 cm in diameter, with type A dissection, and with a patent left internal thoracic artery (LITA) graft to the left anterior descending artery (LAD). Angiography at the ascending aorta did not reveal a coronary artery, nor did it show the sequential saphenous vein graft (SVG) to the obtuse marginal and posterolateral branches. Although the risk of surgical treatment via repeat median sternotomy was very high, we successfully performed the reoperation using profound hypothermic circulatory arrest. The dissection in the mediastinum was facilitated by a sternum retractor for ITA-graft dissection, intraoperative surface echocardiography, and ultrasonic scalpel, with a widely opened bilateral pleural cavity. Furthermore, assuming that most of the myocardium was maintained by perfusion from the in-situ, patent, ITA graft, it was thought that cardioplegia was not necessary during profound hypothermic circulation. |
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