AI Article Synopsis

  • * The condition can be difficult to diagnose, especially in polytrauma patients, and can take years to evolve from an aorta rupture to a false aneurysm.
  • * Management options include surgery and endovascular techniques; in this case, a stent graft procedure was attempted but led to a rupture, requiring successful replacement surgery, and the patient showed positive recovery at the 9-month follow-up.

Article Abstract

We report a case of post-traumatic chronic false aneurysm of the aortic isthmus in a 34-year-old man who had been involved in a car accident 10 years earlier. An initial chest X-ray demonstrated a calcified mass in the upper mediastinum and computed tomography scan revealed a false aneurysm of the aortic isthmus arising above the left subclavian artery. Partial covered rupture of the aorta is not always easy to diagnose and can remain clinically silent in a polytrauma patient. The duration from rupture to false aneurysm formation may extend over many years. This chronic lesion can be managed by surgery, by an endovascular procedure, or by a combined procedure. This case report highlights the current therapeutic approach. A debranching procedure was done in view of a secondary exclusion of the huge false aneurysm by a stent graft. Unfortunately, the false aneurysm ruptured during the procedure and a replacement of the aortic arch and the isthmus under total circulatory arrest was successfully done. The patient was doing well at 9-month follow-up.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.avsg.2015.07.048DOI Listing

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