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Title: Long-term results of the frozen elephant trunk technique for extended aortic arch disease. Author: Uchida N, Katayama A, Tamura K, Sutoh M, Kuraoka M, Murao N, Ishihara H. Journal: Eur J Cardiothorac Surg; 2010 Jun; 37(6):1338-45. PubMed ID: 20303777. Abstract: OBJECTIVES: This study describes the long-term safety and effectiveness of extended aortic arch replacement with the frozen elephant trunk technique from our 12 years of experience. METHODS: Between September 1997 and September 2008, 156 patients (mean age 67.9 years) with different pathologies from the aortic arch to the extended descending aorta in 100 dissections (acute A/acute B/chronic B=66/26/8) and 56 thoracic arteriosclerotic aneurysms (TAAs) had the frozen elephant technique performed upon them. During moderate hypothermic circulation with selective cerebral perfusion, the stent graft was inserted through the transected proximal aortic arch with trans-oesophageal echo guidance. RESULTS: Six patients (3.2%) (acute A/acute B/chronic B/TAA=3/2/0/1) died in hospital. Postoperative morbidity induced four (2.6%) strokes (acute A/acute B/chronic B/TAA=2/0/0/2) and three (2.0%) spinal injuries (paraplegia in two and transient paraparesis in one) (acute A/acute B/chronic B/TAA=0/0/1/2). In the long-term follow-up (mean 63.3 + or - 39.2 months, maximum 144 months) 16 patients died. The survival rate was 99.3%, 86.5% and 74.9% at 1, 5 and 10 years, respectively. An additional operation was performed in 15 (9.4%) (ascending aorta/aortic root/descending aorta/abdominal aorta=1/2/5/7) including three stent-graft-related events (2.1%), and the additional repair proved successful. A follow-up computed tomography (CT) image was available for 96.0% (143/149) of patients who survived longer than 12 months. The size of false lumen or aneurysm increased in four patients, was unchanged in 20 patients (14.0%), shrank in 66 (46.2%) and was completely obliterated in 55 (37.1%). CONCLUSIONS: The frozen elephant technique could be an attractive treatment for extended aortic arch disease to the extended descending aorta for acute aortic dissection as well as arteriosclerotic aneurysm.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]