Mykhailo Kryvetskyi, María Ascaso, Robert Pruna-Guillen, Simone Gasser, Francisco Javier Mancebon, Manuel López-Baamonde, Eduard Quintana
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Valve-sparing aortic root and partial aortic arch replacement with reimplantation of the brachiocephalic trunk for chronic type ІA aortic dissection.
A 47-year-old female with dyspnoea, poor blood pressure control and a family history of aortic disease presented with chronic type IA aortic dissection (with a maximal aortic diameter of 50 mm at the ascending aorta level). Anatomically, the patient presented with involvement of the brachiocephalic trunk and the left renal artery originated from the false lumen. The aortic valve was trileaflet but demonstrated severe eccentric insufficiency. Due to this constellation of findings, urgent surgical repair was indicated. Cardiopulmonary bypass was established centrally by direct true lumen cannulation with Seldinger echo-guided technique and cross-clamping between the distal ascending aorta and the proximal aortic arch (zone 0) performed while cooling. A period of high-moderate hypothermic circulatory arrest (26°C core temperature) with bilateral selective antegrade cerebral perfusion was utilized to complete the distal reconstruction. To repair the morphologically normal trileaflet but severely regurgitant aortic valve prolapsing in the dissected aortic root a valve-sparing aortic root replacement (David procedure) was performed.
期刊介绍:
The Multimedia Manual of Cardio-Thoracic Surgery (MMCTS) is produced by The European Association for Cardio-Thoracic Surgery (EACTS). MMCTS is the world’s premier video-based educational resource for cardiovascular and thoracic surgeons; freely accessible - and essential - for all. MMCTS was launched more than ten years ago under the leadership of founding editor Professor Marko Turina. It was Professor Turina’s vision that the European Association for Cardio-Thoracic Surgery (EACTS), already the world-leader in CT surgery education, should take advantage of the Internet’s rapidly improving video publication capabilities and create a new step-by-step manual of surgical procedures. Professor Turina and EACTS agreed that the manual, MMCTS, should be freely accessible to all users, regardless of association membership status, nationality, or affiliation. MMCTS was self-published by EACTS for some years before being transferred to Oxford University Press, which hosted it until the end of 2016. In November 2016, the Manual returned home to EACTS and it has now relaunched in a completely new format. Since its birth in 2005, MMCTS has published some 400 detailed, video-based demonstrations of cardio-thoracic surgical procedures. Tutorials published prior to 2012 have been archived and we are working with the authors of these tutorials to update their work pending republication on the new site. Our mission is to make MMCTS the best online reference for cardio-thoracic surgeons – residents and experienced surgeons alike. Our aim is to include tutorials presenting procedures at both a fundamental and an advanced level. Truly innovative procedures are also included and are identified as such.