Spontaneous (idiopathic) thoracic aortic rupture (STAR) is uncommon and assumes a rupture of the normal-sized thoracic aorta with no visually apparent aortic disease. Since 1961 about fifty reports have been published. STAR is established in cases of thoracic normal-sized aorta rupture with no traumas, aneurysms/dissections, infection, inflammation, connective tissue diseases, aortic and adjacent organs tumors/metastases, previous surgery, and occurring during pregnancy and the peripartum.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFA syphilitic aortitis is a late cardiovascular lesion of tertiary syphilis that has become exceptionally rare in the antibiotic era but not eradicated completely. Syphilitic aortitis of ascending aorta complicates in ascending aortic aneurysm formation and aortic valve regurgitation, both requiring surgical treatment. After surgery, lifelong surveillance of the remainder of the aorta is recommended because of a priori supposed high incidence of delayed involvement of noninvolved aortic segments.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIntroduction: The native pulmonary valve (PV) reconstruction is an attractive alternative to a replacement but is challenging due to the systematic underdevelopment of the valve structures in congenital heart diseases. The partial replacement of underdeveloped parts of the valve and saving of well-developed may have advantages versus replacing the whole valve in terms of durability and patient outgrowth of the prosthesis.
Case Presentation: This report describes a case of the PV reconstruction by allograft replacement of an underdeveloped anterior leaflet in an adolescent patient who previously corrected pulmonary stenosis during the first year of her life.