TY - JOUR
T1 - Complications following reparative surgery for aortic coarctation or interrupted aortic arch
AU - Aeba, Ryo
AU - Katogi, Toshiyuki
AU - Ueda, Toshihiko
AU - Takeuchi, Shigeyuki
AU - Kawada, Shiaki
PY - 1998/10/3
Y1 - 1998/10/3
N2 - Repair of aortic coarctation or interrupted aortic arch continues to be associated with major long-term morbidity. Thus, we conducted a review of 87 consecutive patients who underwent aortic arch repairs, focusing particular attention on the complications that developed. A two-stage strategy was employed if cardiac lesions were associated. The median age at surgery was 1.5 months with a range of 12 h to 56 years. The aortic arch was repaired using end-to-end anastomosis, subclavian flap aortoplasty, subclavian arterial turning-down aortoplasty, patch aortoplasty, tube graft interposition, or other methods. There were 10 patients who died soon after repair, and all of whom had complex cardiac anomalies. Of the remaining 77 patients, 8 developed recurrent stenosis. These 8 patients were all similar in age, being under 3 months old, and weighing 4 kg or less. A multivariable analysis of the infants identified interrupted aortic arch as an independent risk factor for the development of this complication with an odds ratio of 6.45. Complications following prosthesis-free techniques were similar in prevalence and timing. All reinterventions were mortality-free, but catheter dilation and patch aortoplasty were not always successful. Three extraanatomic bypasses were successfully performed, and one adult who had undergone a previous graft and pseudoaneurysm operation was successfully treated with an extraanatomic bypass. These findings led us to conclude that the initial repair should be performed without a prosthesis, and that reintervention for stenosis should combine catheter dilation and extraanatomic bypass.
AB - Repair of aortic coarctation or interrupted aortic arch continues to be associated with major long-term morbidity. Thus, we conducted a review of 87 consecutive patients who underwent aortic arch repairs, focusing particular attention on the complications that developed. A two-stage strategy was employed if cardiac lesions were associated. The median age at surgery was 1.5 months with a range of 12 h to 56 years. The aortic arch was repaired using end-to-end anastomosis, subclavian flap aortoplasty, subclavian arterial turning-down aortoplasty, patch aortoplasty, tube graft interposition, or other methods. There were 10 patients who died soon after repair, and all of whom had complex cardiac anomalies. Of the remaining 77 patients, 8 developed recurrent stenosis. These 8 patients were all similar in age, being under 3 months old, and weighing 4 kg or less. A multivariable analysis of the infants identified interrupted aortic arch as an independent risk factor for the development of this complication with an odds ratio of 6.45. Complications following prosthesis-free techniques were similar in prevalence and timing. All reinterventions were mortality-free, but catheter dilation and patch aortoplasty were not always successful. Three extraanatomic bypasses were successfully performed, and one adult who had undergone a previous graft and pseudoaneurysm operation was successfully treated with an extraanatomic bypass. These findings led us to conclude that the initial repair should be performed without a prosthesis, and that reintervention for stenosis should combine catheter dilation and extraanatomic bypass.
KW - Aortic arch repair
KW - Aortic coarctation
KW - Extraanatomic bypass
KW - Interrupted aortic arch
KW - Re-stenosis
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U2 - 10.1007/s005950050248
DO - 10.1007/s005950050248
M3 - Article
C2 - 9744396
AN - SCOPUS:0031715069
SN - 0941-1291
VL - 28
SP - 889
EP - 894
JO - Surgery today
JF - Surgery today
IS - 9
ER -