Total aortic arch replacement with a branched graft and limited circulatory arrest of the brain

被引:29
|
作者
Kouchoukos, NT [1 ]
Masetti, P [1 ]
机构
[1] Missouri Baptist Med Ctr, Div Cardiovasc & Thorac Surg, Dept Surg, St Louis, MO 63131 USA
来源
关键词
D O I
10.1016/j.jtcvs.2003.12.031
中图分类号
R5 [内科学];
学科分类号
1002 ; 100201 ;
摘要
Background: Total replacement of the aortic arch is commonly performed with either antegrade perfusion of the brachiocephalic arteries by means of direct cannulation or with an interval of hypothermic circulatory arrest of at least 30 to 40 minutes. We present a technique with a branched graft that uses antegrade brain perfusion without the need for direct cannulation of the brachiocephalic arteries or a separate perfusion circuit, with only a brief period of circulatory arrest of the brain. Methods: Twelve patients underwent resection of the aortic arch through either a midline sternotomy (4 patients) or a bilateral anterior thoracotomy (8 patients). The right axillary artery was used for arterial return and for brain perfusion. After establishing hypothermic circulatory arrest, the brachiocephalic arteries were detached from the aorta, flushed, and occluded with clamps. Hypothermic perfusion of the brain was established through the right axillary artery, and the brachiocephalic arteries were sequentially attached to the limbs of a branched aortic graft. Flow to the brain was then established in the antegrade direction through the axillary artery. Results: The mean duration of circulatory arrest of the brain at a mean nasopharyngeal temperature of 16degreesC was 8.8 minutes (range, 6-13 minutes). The subsequent period of hypothermic (20degreesC-22degreesC) brain perfusion, during which the 3 branches of the graft were attached to the brachiocephalic arteries, averaged 35 minutes (range, 23-44 minutes). All the patients survived the procedure and were discharged from the hospital. No patient sustained a permanent neurologic deficit. One patient had lethargy for 2 days, with full recovery. Nine of the 12 patients were extubated within 72 hours. Conclusions: This technique obviates the need for direct cannulation of the brachiocephalic arteries and for a separate perfusion circuit and requires only a brief period of circulatory arrest of the brain.
引用
收藏
页码:233 / 237
页数:5
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [21] Branch-first aortic arch replacement with no circulatory arrest or deep hypothermia
    Matalanis, George
    Koirala, Rhiannon S.
    Shi, William Y.
    Hayward, Philip A.
    McCall, Peter R.
    JOURNAL OF THORACIC AND CARDIOVASCULAR SURGERY, 2011, 142 (04): : 809 - 815
  • [22] Modified total arch replacement using a four-branched arch graft for acute type a aortic dissection with minimal brain and spinal cord ischemic time
    Lu, S.
    Sun, X.
    Hong, T.
    Yang, S.
    Song, K.
    La, H.
    Wang, C.
    JOURNAL OF CARDIOVASCULAR SURGERY, 2015, 56 (04): : 519 - 524
  • [23] Normothermic total arch replacement without hypothermic circulatory arrest to treat aortic distal arch aneurysm in a patient with cold agglutinin disease
    Ishida, Narihiro
    Takemura, Hirofumi
    Shimabukuro, Katsuya
    Matsuno, Yukihiro
    INTERACTIVE CARDIOVASCULAR AND THORACIC SURGERY, 2011, 13 (04) : 432 - 434
  • [24] Results of "elephant trunk" total aortic arch replacement using a multi-branched, collared graft prosthesis
    Schneider, Stefan R. B.
    Dell'Aquila, Angelo M.
    Akil, Ali
    Schlarb, Dominik
    Panuccio, Guiseppe
    Martens, Sven
    Rukosujew, Andreas
    HEART AND VESSELS, 2016, 31 (03) : 390 - 396
  • [25] Results of “elephant trunk” total aortic arch replacement using a multi-branched, collared graft prosthesis
    Stefan R.B. Schneider
    Angelo M. Dell’Aquila
    Ali Akil
    Dominik Schlarb
    Guiseppe Panuccio
    Sven Martens
    Andreas Rukosujew
    Heart and Vessels, 2016, 31 : 390 - 396
  • [26] Clinical results of aortic arch replacement using a four branched prosthetic graft
    Sakamoto, S
    Matsubara, J
    Nagayoshi, Y
    Nishizawa, H
    Takeuchi, K
    Nonaka, T
    Noguchi, Y
    JOURNAL OF CARDIOVASCULAR SURGERY, 2003, 44 (06): : 751 - 755
  • [27] Less Invasive total arch replacement for acute type A aortic dissection -Total Arch Replacement with Branched Open Stentgrafting Technique
    Takeuchi, Mugho
    Kuratani, Toru
    Sawa, Yoshiki
    CIRCULATION, 2008, 118 (18) : S613 - S613
  • [28] Total aortic arch replacement without deep hypothermic circulatory arrest in type A aortic dissection: Left axillar artery for arterial cannulation
    Kiziltepe, Ugursay
    Ince, Ilker
    Senkal, Melike
    Surer, Suleyman
    Duvan, Ibrahim
    Ersoy, Ozgur
    Delibalta, Omer
    Mavi, Osman
    Sahin, Elif
    JTCVS TECHNIQUES, 2023, 22 : 120 - 131
  • [29] EXPERIENCE WITH PROFOUND HYPOTHERMIA AND CIRCULATORY ARREST IN THE TREATMENT OF ANEURYSMS OF THE AORTIC-ARCH - AORTIC-ARCH REPLACEMENT FOR ACUTE ARCH DISSECTIONS
    ERGIN, MA
    OCONNOR, J
    GUINTO, R
    GRIEPP, RB
    JOURNAL OF THORACIC AND CARDIOVASCULAR SURGERY, 1982, 84 (05): : 649 - 655
  • [30] Severe systemic inflammatory response syndrome in patients following Total aortic arch replacement with deep hypothermic circulatory arrest
    Li, Jun
    Yang, Lijing
    Wang, Guyan
    Wang, Yuefu
    Wang, Chunrong
    Shi, Sheng
    JOURNAL OF CARDIOTHORACIC SURGERY, 2019, 14 (01)