We report a rare case of aortic valve thrombosis in a 55-year-old man. He had reduced urine output and generalized edema four days before admission. He felt sick and had chest pain on the day of admission.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: Often, we experience cases of aneurysm shrinkage and no aneurysm shrinkage after successful endovascular aortic aneurysm repair, without postoperative endoleaks. We studied these cases to ascertain the predictive factors for aneurysm shrinkage.
Methods: From 2007 to 2014, we selected 255 cases that comprised aneurysm shrinkage (>4 mm) and no-shrinkage cases (shrinkage from 0 to 4 mm).
An 83-year-old woman with a Kommerell diverticulum was treated by anatomical endovascular repair with a deep site in-situ fenestration instead of complex debranching techniques. The main component of the thoracic stent-graft was deployed just distal to the third cervical branch to completely exclude the Kommerell diverticulum. A deep site in-situ fenestration was made on the main component using a radiofrequency needle through the left subclavian artery, and a stent-graft was deployed to bridge the main component to the left subclavian artery.
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