| Literature DB >> 25889146 |
Dorota Sobczyk1, Krzysztof Nycz2.
Abstract
STUDYEntities:
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 25889146 PMCID: PMC4396118 DOI: 10.1186/s12947-015-0008-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cardiovasc Ultrasound ISSN: 1476-7120 Impact factor: 2.062
Demographic and medical data of studied population
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| Age ± SD [ | 58,69 ± 12,61 |
| Women/men | 47 (26,4%)/131 (73,6%) |
| Cardiogenic shock | 131 (73,6%) |
| Marfan syndrome | 2 (1,12%) |
| Trauma prior to admission | 1 (0,56%) |
| History of the cardiac or vascular surgery | 11 (6,18%) |
| Prior AVR | 5 (2,81%) |
| Prior CABG | 4 (2,25%) |
| Prior abdominal aneurysm repair | 2 (1,12%) |
| Type of cardiac surgery | |
| Alloplasty of ascending aorta using composite aortic graft (Bental de Bono procedure) | 101 (58,72%) |
| Alloplasty of ascending aorta sparing aortic valve | 63 (36,63%) |
| Alloplasty of aortic arch | 36 (20,93%) |
| Aortic valve plasty | 5 (2,91%) |
| CABG | 10 (5,81%) |
| Stent-graft deployment in the descending aorta | 2 (1,16%) |
| The brachio-cephalic trunk plasty | 2 (1,16%) |
| MVR | 1 (0,58%) |
| Deaths | 69 (38,76%) |
| Preoperative | 6 (3,37%) |
| Intraoperative | 30 (16,85%) |
| Postoperative (before discharge) | 33 (18,54%) |
| Echocardiographic findings | |
| Aortic dissection | 159 (89,32%) |
| Severe aortic dilatation (max. diameter ≥ 60 mm) | 60 (34,48%) |
| LVEF ± SD [%] | 49,62 ± 11,97 |
| LVEF ≤ 35% | 32 (18,39%) |
| Regional wall motion abnormalities | 55 (31,6%) |
| Cardiac tamponade | 48 (26,97%) |
| Bicuspid aortic valve | 9 (5,06%) |
| Calcification of the tricuspid aortic valve | 10 (5,62%) |
| Moderate/severe aortic regurgitation | 53 (29,78%) |
| Calcific mitral stenosis | 1 (0,56%) |
Figure 1Computed tomography showing dilated ascending aorta with flap of proximal dissection. A. Computed tomography – 3-D reconstruction image: dilated ascending aorta is visible with a flap of proximal dissection along the distance of visualized vessel. B. Computed tomography – transverse plane zoom image: at the level of aortic root a true and false lumina of the vessel are visible, separated by a flap of dissection. C. Computed tomography – tangenital plane: showing ascending aorta and partially false lumen with an intimal flap of proximal aortic dissection.
Figure 2Transthoracic echocardiography showing linear echo of intimal tear in dilated aortic root above aortic valve level. A. Transthoracic echocardiography – parasternal long axis view: linear echo of intimal tear is seen just above aortic valve in systole. B. Transthoracic echocardiography – apical 5-chamber view: linear echo of intimal flap is visible in dilated aortic root above aortic valve level.
Figure 3Intraoperative image showing dilated ascending aorta. A. Intraoperative image: dilated ascending aorta is seen in an operative field. B. Intraoperative image: view from the operating field after cross-section of ascending aorta, flap of dissection separating a true from a false lumen is visible.
Correlation of the aortic diameter (maximum size) obtained by the different techniques (TTE/CT/intraoperative view)
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| TTE vs CT | 56,46 ± 10,79 vs 58,76 ± 11,96 | 3,89 ± 3,88 | 0,869 | <0,001 |
| TTE vs intraop | 56,46 ± 10,79 vs 62,02 ± 15,30 | 4,22 ± 5,26 | 0,844 | <0,001 |
| CT vs intraop | 58,76 ± 11,96 vs 62,02 ± 15,30 | 3,94 ± 5,59 | 0,838 | <0,001 |
Figure 4Scatterplot showing the correlation between transthoracic echocardiography and computed tomography measurements for the maximal dimensions of the ascending aorta.
Figure 5Scatterplot showing the correlation between transthoracic echocardiography and intraoperative measurements for the maximal dimensions of the ascending aorta.
Figure 6Scatterplot showing the correlation between computed tomography and intraoperative measurements for the maximal dimensions of the ascending aorta.