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RESEARCH PRODUCT
New 3-zone hybrid graft : First-in-man experience in acute type I dissection
Daniel WendtThomas SchlosserHeinz JakobDaniel Sebastian DohleMohamed El GabryKonstantinos TsagakisSharaf-eldin Shehadasubject
Pulmonary and Respiratory MedicineAortic archAdultMalemedicine.medical_specialtyTime FactorsElephant trunksmedicine.medical_treatmentMedizinLumen (anatomy)030204 cardiovascular system & hematologyProsthesis Design03 medical and health sciencesBlood Vessel Prosthesis Implantation0302 clinical medicinemedicine.arteryMedicineHumansSurgical emergencyCerebral perfusion pressureAgedAortic dissectionbusiness.industryEndovascular ProceduresStentmedicine.diseaseSurgeryAortic AneurysmBlood Vessel ProsthesisStenosisAortic DissectionTreatment Outcome030228 respiratory systemAcute DiseaseSurgeryStentsCardiology and Cardiovascular Medicinebusinessdescription
Abstract Objective Acute type I aortic dissection (AAD) represents a surgical emergency with time-dependent evolving complications. Frozen elephant trunk (FET) enables false lumen exclusion downstream but is still debated in AAD due to its greater dimension of surgery. To combine the benefits of fast proximal repair with the FET benefits, a 3-zone hybrid graft was developed consisting of an ascending polyester portion, an arch noncovered stent, and a descending stent graft. Mid-term results of this new technique are presented. Methods A total of 6 patients (age mean 69 years) with type I AAD in critical status (Penn classification B n = 5, BC n = 1) were operated between July 2016 and April 2018 using the 3-zone hybrid graft. The device was implanted on the basis of strict compassionate use. Operations were performed under distal hypothermic circulatory arrest and selective antegrade cerebral perfusion (SACP). Results Operative mortality was 17% (n = 1). Mean crossclamp and SACP time were 92 and 34 minutes, respectively, but came down in the last 2 cases to 75/65 crossclamp and 23/24 SACP minutes each. During follow up, mean 19 ± 12 months, one endovascular extension downstream was performed. Imaging control demonstrated no anastomotic-related proximal entry and no true lumen collapse downstream. Conclusions The goal to achieve fast and reliable repair of complicated type I AAD down to midthoracic level seems to be achievable. Noncovered stenting of the head vessel's origin does not cause stenosis or obstruction. A multicenter studying of this concept is next.
year | journal | country | edition | language |
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2019-10-13 |