REC: Interventional Cardiology (English Ed.) (Aug 2023)

Percutaneous closure of coronary ostial anastomoses pseudoaneurysm after Bentall

  • Sofía González Lizarbe,
  • Teresa Borderías Villarroel,
  • Cristina Ruisánchez Villar,
  • José María Navasa Melado,
  • Ivana Pulitani,
  • Dae-Hyun Lee Hwang

DOI
https://doi.org/10.24875/RECICE.M23000368
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 5, no. 3
pp. 236 – 238

Abstract

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Aortic pseudoaneurysm is a rare and serious complications after surgical aortic valve replacement. Its appearance in the reimplantation region of coronary arteries has been documented on very few occasions. This is the case of a 53-year-old man with a Stanford type A acute aortic dissection. The aortic root and ascending aorta were replaced with coronary artery reimplantation (modified Bentall-Bono technique) with favorable early disease progression. The thoracoabdominal computed tomography scan performed 25 days after surgery to study an incidental renal mass revealed the presence of a 14 mm x 10 mm hyperdense nodular image in the arterial phase of posterior location with respect to the left main coronary artery ostium consistent with a postoperative pseudoaneurysm (figure 1A,C, circle). A 3D transesophageal echocardiography confirmed the presence of a pseudoaneurysm surrounding the aortic root with flow inside stemming from the suture of the left main coronary artery (figure 2A,D, asterisk and arrow). Figure 1. Figure 2. Given the high risk of reintervention, the coronary angiography confirmed the presence of a shunt between the suture of left main coronary artery and the saccular space of pseudoaneurysm (figure 3A, arrow). Selective microcatheterization of this sac was performed (PX SLIM, Penumbra Inc., United States; microcatheter with a minimum inner lumen...