| Literature DB >> 35605220 |
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: Tuberculous aortic aneurysm (TBAA) is an exceedingly rare but severe manifestation of tuberculosis, with a high risk of sudden rupture of the aorta in absence of medical or surgical intervention. This review aimed to provide a detailed understanding of TBAA, including its associated complications, affected population, treatment measures, and outcomes.Entities:
Keywords: Aortic Aneurysm; Blood Vessel Prosthesis; Early Diagnosis; Endovascular Procedures; Treatment Outcome; Tuberculosis
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35605220 PMCID: PMC9162425 DOI: 10.21470/1678-9741-2020-0611
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Braz J Cardiovasc Surg ISSN: 0102-7638
Case reports of tuberculous aortic aneurysm.
| Author & year | Study | Age (years)/gender (M/F) | Initial complications | Location (artery) | Surgical procedure | Follow-up (months) | ATT (months) | Outcome | Comment | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Pre-operative | Post-operative | |||||||||
| Clough et al., 2010[ | Tuberculous mycotic aneurysm | 49 | Breathlessness, weight loss, and fever, back pain after 5 months of RIPE treatment | Supraceliac (originating from the celiac artery), infradiaphragmatic saccular, false aortic aneurysm | Endovascular repair using custom-made endovascular graft | 48 | 5 | 3 | Survived | Endovascular repair of a tuberculous mycotic aortic aneurysm using a custom-made stent graft may be both feasible and durable |
| Costiniuk et al., 2010[ | Ruptured AAA and SFAA secondary to | 75/M | Abdominal pain and back pain without fever | AAA and pseudoaneurysm of the SFA | Emergency laparotomy with Dacron graft implantation 8 days after the vein graft interposition to bypass the left SFA | 12 | NR | 12 | Survived | Clinicians should be aware of the possible extravesical complications of BCG therapy |
| History of hypertension, dyslipidemia, smoking, diabetes, and PMR | ||||||||||
| Benjelloun et al., 2012[ | Treatment of multiple TAA of tuberculous origin | 16/F | Thoracic pain with a history of ruptured AA aneurysm | TAA | EVAR using Multilayer stent | 6, 12, 18 | No | No (aspirin and clopidogrel for 1 month) | Survived | EVAR with an uncovered stent is preferred to open surgery, preventing high morbidity and mortality |
| Pierret et al., 2012[ | Multiple tuberculous aortic aneurysms of the thoracic and abdominal aorta | 19/F | Fever, thrombocytopenic purport, gum bleeding, microcytic anemia, lymphocytosis, elevated CRP, and elevated fibrinogen | Dilation of AA, posterior thoracic and celiac aorta | Surgical resection with cryopreserved aortic allograft patch | 1, 3, 6, 9 | 1.1 | 9 | Survived | Early if not systematic detection of aortic tuberculous lesions in tuberculous patients plays a crucial role in the effective treatment of TAA |
| Kuhan et al., 2013[ | Tuberculous abdominal aortic aneurysm on a patient with renal transplant | 61/M | Lower back pain, malaise, night sweats, weight loss, end-stage renal disease, diabetes | AA, IA | EVAR | 6 | MIPE × 1 MAPE × 18 | Yes, 18 | Survived | EVAR is best for immunosuppressed patients with transplantation with TB mycotic aneurysms |
| Marjanovic et al., 2013[ | Mycotic aneurysm of the thoracic aorta | 63/M | Back pain, hemoptysis, temperature 38 °C, WBC count 12,000/L, and CRP value 150 mg/L | Mycotic aneurysm of DTA | EVAR | 6, 12 | No | 4 | Survived | Endoluminal stent graft is a better alternative for DTA treatment. Long-term postoperative ATT and regular follow-up are important |
| Holmes et al., 2014[ | Mycotic aortic aneurysm due to intravesical BCG immunotherapy | 64/M | Progressive back pain, smoking, high-grade bladder cancer | Proximal aortic aneurysm from the proximal abdominal aorta | Open surgical debridement. Partial left heart bypass and distal aortic perfusion | RIPE initiated held 72h prior to surgery | RIE × 3 RME × 1 RM × 6 | Survived | Surgical evaluation and ATT (2 × RIE followed by IR × 7) is essential for mycotic aortic aneurysm | |
| Kim et al., 2014[ | Multiple tuberculous TAA | 47/M | Persistent fever, left buttock abscess, left inguinal lymphadenitis | IAA, RCIA, DTA | EVAR, transcatheter embolization | 14 | 1 | Yes, 12 | Survived | EVAR with antimycobacterial therapy is a treatment option for multiple tuberculous aneurysms |
| Pathirana et al., 2015[ | Ascending aortic aneurysm with severe aortic regurgitation caused by | 40/F | Exertional breathlessness (NYHA II), weight loss | TA (ascending), AR | Aortic valve and root replacement | 10 | RIPE × 10 | Yes, 10 | Survived | Clinical and radiological diagnostic criteria for tuberculous aortitis need to be optimized in the absence of apparent etiology |
| Velayudhan et al., 2016[ | Multiple tuberculous mycotic aneurysms of the aorta extending from the distal aortic arch to the aortic bifurcation | 18/M | Pulmonary TB, abdominal pain | TAA | Open surgical repair | NR | Yes | ATT × 6 | Survived | Open graft replacement is an appropriate treatment for TB-related thoracoabdominal aneurysm |
| Dilangalen, 2016[ | Multiple saccular aneurysms caused by | 58/M | Severe abdominal pain | ScA, AA | Total arch replacement | NR | No | Yes, NR | Survived | Surgery and long-term ATT are the best option for tuberculous aortitis |
| Higashi Y 2018[ | AAA caused by | 69/M | Acute onset of intermittent stabbing pain in the right lower abdominal quadrant. | IAA | Surgical resection and aortic reconstruction | 1, 6, 9 | Yes | 9 | Survived | Cryopreserved aortic allograft for in-line reconstruction provides technical simplicity and long-term patency |
| Fever, chills, and night sweats for 3 months | ||||||||||
| Pluemvitayaporn et al., 2018[ | Mycotic abdominal aortic aneurysm and lumbar tuberculous spondylitis with cauda equina syndrome | 79/M | Severe back pain, low-grade fever, malaise, weight loss | AA (infrarenal) | Radical debridement by left transpsoas approach, then endovascular stent graft, finally posterior decompressive laminectomy | 12 | NR | ATT × 12 | Survived | Successful management involves accurate diagnosis and prompt treatment |
| D’Cruz R 2019[ | Multiple synchronous tuberculous aneurysms | 35/F | Painless right supraclavicular lump, unintentional weight loss | TA, CA, LR & SA, RI | TEVAR, ascending aortic replacement with aortic valve suspension, coil embolization | 12 | Yes (NR) | 6 months | Survived | Multidisciplinary management of synchronous TA is essential for the best clinical outcome |
| Li et al., 2019[ | Ruptured thoracic aortic pseudoaneurysm secondary to Pott’s disease during spine surgery | 57/F | Primary pulmonary TB, breathlessness, chest pain, weight loss, fever | TA | Posterior vertebra stabilization surgery (for Pott’s disease), endovascular treatment due to rupture, partial corpectomy | 24 | NR | Yes, 12 | Survived | Repair or stabilization of TAA is necessary prior to spine surgery |
| Savlania et al., 2019[ | Primary AEF due to tubercular aortitis | 75/M | Black, tarry stool and hematemesis | IAA | Open surgical repair of an aneurysm with extra‑anatomical right axillounifemoral bypass | 1 | NR | RIPE, NR | Survived | Patients with AEF due to tuberculosis can be saved with early surgery |
| Zhao et al., 2019[ | Mycotic aortic aneurysms with miliary TB | 73/M | Pain in the back and right-side of the chest, dry cough, inability to walk. Based on pulmonary TB (under treatment) | TA, AA, RIA | EVAR | Patient died due to pulmonary infection | RIPE × 1 | NR | Died | ATT therapy is inadequate, microcore stent graft is a possible option to improve hemodynamics |
| Mimbimi et al., 2020[ | Dissecting aneurysm of ascending aorta secondary to Takayasu’s arteritis with concomitant tuberculosis | 15/M | Growing right cervical mass, all arterial pulsations, vascular murmur in carotid and subclavian arteries on both sides | Aortic arch wall thickening, saccular dissecting aneurysm in the ascending aorta, several fusiform aneurysms and stenosis of all supra-aortic arteries | Ascending aorta and total aortic arch replacement | 6 months | 3 months | NR | Survived | There are very few reports on Takayasu’s arteritis with concomitant tuberculosis leading to aortic dissection. The patient was successfully managed in this case |
Fig. 1Gender as a risk factor for TBAA observed in the case reports from the last ten years.
Recent trends in surgery and drug management in TBAA.
| Author | Surgery | Drug/medication | Symptoms |
|---|---|---|---|
| Li et al.[ | Yes | Yes | Breathlessness, chest pain, weight loss, and fever |
| Surgery consisting of posterior spine stabilization, anterior excision of the infected field, and aortic reconstruction. Endovascular stent grafting provides the best results immediately | 1-year AT chemotherapy | ||
| Han et al.[ | Yes | Yes | Chest and back discomfort, painless right supraclavicular lump and unintentional weight loss |
| Ascending aortic replacement with aortic valve suspension and coil embolization of right iliac artery pseudoaneurysm | ATT | ||
| Velayudhan et al.[ | Yes | Yes | Abdominal pain |
| Open surgery | Isoniazid and rifampicin | ||
| Dilangalen[ | Yes | Yes | Severe abdominal pain |
| Arch replacement surgery | ATT | ||
| Pluemvitayaporn[ | Yes | Yes | Severe back pain, low-grade fever, malaise, and weight loss |
| Radical debridement via left transpsoas approach | AT chemotherapy for 12 months | ||
| Savlania et al.[ | Yes | Yes | Upper gastrointestinal bleeding, abdominal pain, and pulsating abdominal mass |
| ATT | |||
| Zhao et al.[ | No | Yes | Pain in the back and on the right side of the chest associated with dry cough, presented with inability to walk for 1 month |
| Endovascular repair with microcore stent graft | AT regimen (pyrazinamide, isoniazid, rifampicin, and ethambutol) | ||
| Mimbimi et al.[ | Yes | Yes | Growing right cervical mass, arterial pulsations, vascular murmur in carotid and subclavian arteries on both sides |
| ATT, high-dose corticosteroids, antiplatelet therapy, betablocker administration during the initial active phase | |||
| AT=antituberculous; ATT=antituberculous therapy. | |||
Abbreviations, Acronyms & Symbols
| AAA | = Abdominal aortic aneurysm |
| AFB | = Acid-fast bacilli |
| ATT | = Antituberculosis therapy |
| BCG | = Bacillus Calmette-Guérin |
| CT | = Computed tomography |
| DTA | = Descending thoracic aorta |
| FDA | = Food and Drug Administration |
| RIPE | = Rifampicin, isoniazid, pyrazinamide, and ethambutol |
| TAA | = Thoracic aortic aneurysm |
| TAAA | = Thoracoabdominal aortic aneurysm |
| TBAA | = Tuberculous aortic aneurysm |
| TB | = Tuberculosis |
| TEVAR | = Thoracic endovascular aortic repair |
Authors' roles & responsibilities
| AA | Substantial contributions to the conception or design of the work; or the acquisition, analysis, or interpretation of data for the work; drafting the work or revising it critically for important intellectual content; agreement to be accountable for all aspects of the work in ensuring that questions related to the accuracy or integrity of any part of the work are appropriately investigated and resolved; final approval of the version to be published |