Literature DB >> 12469050

Surgical treatment of nonaneurysmal aortic arch lesions in patients with systemic embolization.

Yann Gouëffic1, Philippe Chaillou, J Christophe Pillet, Daniel Duveau, Philippe Patra.   

Abstract

PURPOSE: Atherosclerotic lesions of the aortic arch are potential sources of arterial embolism. Here we investigate whether surgery, with the necessary circulatory supports, can be proposed as a good option for treatment of this problem. Study of these lesions on a national scale in France has made possible the assessment for future indications of techniques and results of the surgical management of aortic arch lesions, which retrospectively proved to be embolic.
METHODS: Thirty-eight patients, (19 men and 19 women) underwent surgery between 1976 and 1996 in 17 French cardiovascular surgical centers. The average age at the time of surgery was 49 +/- 12 years (range, 31 to 82 years). Atherosclerotic lesions were detected with transesophagial echocardiography (n = 19), angiography of the aortic arch (n = 16), computed tomography (n = 9), and magnetic resonance imaging (n = 10). Surgery consisted of thrombectomy and endarterectomy (n = 22), aortic resection and graft replacement (n = 10), and patch aortoplasty (n = 5; one thrombus disappeared spontaneously before surgery was performed).
RESULTS: The average postoperative period was 30 months (range, 3 to 82 months). Contact was lost with four patients after a follow-up period of 12 months. On pathologic specimens obtained at surgery, an atherosclerotic plaque was found in 73% of the cases (n = 28). In 15% of the cases, the aorta appeared normal (n = 6) and four other types of lesion were identified: angiosarcoma (n = 1), ectasia at the insertion of the remains of the ductus arteriosus (n = 1), rupture of tunica intima (n = 1), and a fibroblastic plaque (n = 1). A thrombus was identified in 26 cases, attached to the arterial wall in 18 cases. When transesophagial echocardiographic results showed mobile lesions (n = 22), histopathologic examination of specimens allowed the detection of a thrombus in 18 cases and an atherosclerotic plaque with a mobile projection in four cases. The postoperative mortality rate was 2.6%. The morbidity rate (28.9%; n = 11) was related to neurologic complications (n = 6), vascular complications (n = 4), and infection (n = 1). Four cases (12%) were reoperated.
CONCLUSION: Nonaneurysmal aortic arch lesions are a frequent and still underestimated source of stroke and peripheral embolization. Surgery with circulatory support can be recommended in good operative candidates with recurrent critical events despite medical management and with high embolic potential (young patients with no calcified plaques).

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Year:  2002        PMID: 12469050     DOI: 10.1067/mva.2002.128933

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Vasc Surg        ISSN: 0741-5214            Impact factor:   4.268


  4 in total

1.  Floating thrombus originating from an almost normal thoracic aorta.

Authors:  Osamu Namura; Masakazu Sogawa; Fuyuki Asami; Takeshi Okamoto; Kazuhiko Hanzawa; Jun-ichi Hayashi
Journal:  Gen Thorac Cardiovasc Surg       Date:  2011-09-14

2.  Floating thrombus in the proximal aortic arch.

Authors:  Jong Bum Choi; Soon Ho Choi; Nam Ho Kim; Jin Won Jeong
Journal:  Tex Heart Inst J       Date:  2004

3.  Mural thrombus in the normal-appearing descending thoracic aorta of a chronic smoker.

Authors:  Habib Habib; Judy Hsu; Patricia Jo Winchell; Joseph Daoko
Journal:  Tex Heart Inst J       Date:  2013

Review 4.  A critical reappraisal of the treatment modalities of normal appearing thoracic aorta mural thrombi.

Authors:  Georgios Karaolanis; Demetrios Moris; Chris Bakoyiannis; Diamantis I Tsilimigras; Viktoria-Varvara Palla; Eleftherios Spartalis; Dimitrios Schizas; Sotirios Georgopoulos
Journal:  Ann Transl Med       Date:  2017-08
  4 in total

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