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

Rapid false lumen dilation and pseudocoarctation due to inadvertent preferential false lumen perfusion using the frozen elephant trunk technique in a chronic residual aortic dissection

  • Jelle Fleerakkers, MD,
  • Uday Sonker, MD,
  • Robin H. Heijmen, MD, PhD

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 6, no. 1
pp. 101 – 103

Abstract

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A patient with a chronic postdissection distal arch aneurysm was treated with total arch replacement and frozen elephant trunk. Following uneventful initial recovery, the frozen elephant trunk appeared to be inadvertently perfusing the false lumen through an already present (in retrospect) intimal tear, resulting in rapid dilation of the false lumen and proximal compression of the graft. Treatment consisted, first, of endovascular redirection of flow toward the distal true lumen and, second, open surgical repair of the remaining type IV aneurysm. This case underlines the importance of scrutinizing preoperative imaging for correct use of the frozen elephant trunk. Keywords: Aortic dissection, Frozen elephant trunk, Aortic arch, TEVAR