Journal of Vascular Surgery Cases and Innovative Techniques (Sep 2020)

Endovascular management of complete disruption of aortic anastomosis after pediatric multivisceral transplant

  • Ryan M. McEnaney, MD,
  • Catherine Go, MD,
  • Xiaoyi Li, MD,
  • Mohammad H. Eslami, MD, MPH

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 6, no. 3
pp. 331 – 336

Abstract

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Multivisceral transplantation is a life-saving treatment for many chronically ill patients with advanced abdominal pathologies. For such transplants, a complex arterial reconstruction is required, with numerous anastomoses on a composite donor graft and the native aorta. In these patients, anastomotic disruption or pseudoaneurysm formation, often in the setting of infection, are deadly complications. Open surgical repair is hazardous, because many of these patients have dense adhesions. Reported cases of disruption at the aortic anastomosis to date have resulted in patient demise. We report the case of a pediatric multivisceral transplant recipient with ruptured aortic pseudoaneurysm. He underwent an emergent endovascular parallel stent grafting technique, which successfully controlled bleeding and maintained graft perfusion.

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