| Literature DB >> 35120493 |
Anne Marie Augustin1, Franziska Wolfschmidt2, Thilo Elsässer3, Alexander Sauer4, Alexander Dierks5, Thorsten Alexander Bley6, Ralph Kickuth6.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: To analyze the benefit of color-coded summation images in the assessment of target lumen perfusion in patients with aortic dissection and malperfusion syndrome before and after fluoroscopy-guided aortic fenestration.Entities:
Keywords: Angiography; Aortic dissection; Color-coding; DSA; Endovascular; Fenestration
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35120493 PMCID: PMC8817583 DOI: 10.1186/s12880-022-00744-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Med Imaging ISSN: 1471-2342 Impact factor: 1.930
Patients and procedural data
| Mean age (years) | 58.8 ± 11.3 | |
| Male:female ratio | 13:12 |
Fig. 154-year-old male patient with spinal malperfusion syndrome due to acute Stanford type B aortic dissection. a Color-coded image gained from DSA prior to fenestration with ROI placement in the true lumen at the level of the infrarenal abdominal aorta. Compromised blood flow in the true lumen is represented by cold color gradients and corresponding flow curves (right corner). b After creation of two fenestration windows, the color-coded summation image demonstrates warmer color gradients at the measuring points and shortened TTP values. The arrow marks one of the fenestration windows just below the level of the renal artery
Fig. 245-year-old female patient with iliofemoral malperfusion syndrome of the left leg due to acute type B aortic dissection. a Preinterventional color-coded composite image demonstrates the dissection membrane affecting the distal abdominal aorta and extending in the left common iliac artery. Color gradient in the left proximal iliac segment indicates compromised blood flow with colder color gradients compared to the contralateral vessel axis. Corresponding TTP was 6.91 s. b After creation of a fenestration window at the level above the aortic bifurcation, improvement of the color gradient is demonstrated, with a TTP value of 4.44 s. Morphological improvement of vessel anatomy is also shown. Corresponding manometry did not demonstrate an improvement of the intraluminal blood pressure gradient (prior fenestration 0 mmHg; following fenestration 3 mmHg)
Fig. 3TTP (s) prior to and following endovascular dissection flap fenestration
Fig. 4Median systolic blood pressure gradient (mmHg) prior to and following endovascular dissection flap fenestration