Journal of Vascular Surgery Cases and Innovative Techniques (Dec 2022)

Crushing of a bridging stent during follow-up of endovascular branched aortic arch repair: A novel mode of failure

  • Martijn L. Dijkstra, MD, PhD,
  • Angelos Karelis, MD,
  • Björn Sonesson, MD, PhD,
  • Roberta Vaccarino, MD,
  • Nuno V. Dias, MD, PhD

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 8, no. 4
pp. 646 – 650

Abstract

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A 68-year-old man developed aneurysmal degeneration of the aortic arch and proximal descending aorta after an open ascending graft for a type A aortic dissection. A three-branched endovascular aortic arch repair was performed with patency of all branches despite some degree of initial misalignment of the branches in relation to the target vessels. At 6 months postoperatively, an asymptomatic partial crushing of the left common carotid bridging grafts was observed on computed tomography angiography. This was treated by reinforcing the branch with a balloon-expandable endograft. The postoperative course was uneventful but a computed tomography angiography after 1 month showed recurrent asymptomatic compression. A left carotid-subclavian bypass was eventually performed. We have reported a new failure mode of an inner branch arch repair of residual type A chronic dissection.

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