A case of 33-year-old woman with aberrant right subclavian artery was reported. She was admitted to the hospital complaining of progressive dysphagia of six months' duration. The esophagogram revealed an oblique tubular defect in the superior thoracic esophagus. Aortograms confirmed the presence of an anomalous right subclavian artery arising as a fourth branch of the aortic arch, passing behind the esophagus in its course to the right arm. Operation was performed on Sept. 4, 1990. Through a median sternotomy, the ascending aorta and the two carotids were dissected free. With gentle forward retraction of the ascending aorta to the left, the origin of the aberrant right subclavian artery could easily be exposed. The right subclavian artery was then divided and its origin from the distal aortic arch oversewn. The vessel was removed from the retroesophageal position and blood flow reestablished to the right arm by an end-to-side anastomosis to the right carotid artery, using a temporary shunt tube. These procedures were accomplished without difficulty. Postoperatively, the patient made an uneventful recovery and was discharged 16 days after the procedure. A postoperative esophagogram confirmed the removal of the esophageal compression. The blood pressure was equal in the two upper extremities. In follow-up study, her symptoms had completely disappeared.
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