Content area

Abstract

The aim of this study was to evaluate the role of percutaneous interventions in treating ischemia complicating aortic dissection. Forty-five patients with ischemia complicating aortic dissection were treated by balloon fenestration, true lumen stenting, angioplasty, or thrombolysis. Clinical and laboratory examinations were performed before and after intervention, and at the end of follow-up (median 37 months). Eighteen dissections were acute, 9 sub-acute, and 18 chronic. Mesenterohepatic ischemia resolved in 16 of 18 patients; lactate and SGOT values fell from 2.89 to 1.23 mmol/L (p=0.006) and from 165.9 to 59.7 U/L (p=0.034), respectively. In patients with renal ischemia, creatinine levels fell from 360.1 to 196.3 μmol/L (p=0.007) accompanied by a significant reduction in blood pressure. Limb-threatening ischemia resolved in three of four patients; in 21 claudicants, the mean walking distance improved from 272 to 1,283 m (p=0.001). Spinal ischemia resolved completely or partially in six of eight patients. Adjunctive surgical measures were necessary in six patients. Overall 30-day mortality in the 45 patients was 6.7%; all three deaths were in patients with acute dissections (mortality in this subgroup 16.7%). Ischemia complicating aortic dissection can be effectively treated by percutaneous interventions resulting in good early and mid-term outcomes.

Details

Title
Percutaneous interventions for treating ischemic complications of aortic dissection
Author
Chavan, Ajay; Rosenthal, Herbert; Luthe, Lars; Pfingsten, Stefanie; Kutschka, Ingo; Easo, Jerry; Piepenbrock, Siegfried; Dapunt, Otto; Haverich, Axel; Galanski, Michael
Pages
488-94
Publication year
2009
Publication date
Feb 2009
Publisher
Springer Nature B.V.
ISSN
09387994
e-ISSN
14321084
Source type
Scholarly Journal
Language of publication
English
ProQuest document ID
218907934
Copyright
European Society of Radiology 2009