Fifteen cases of traumatic thoracic aortic rupture (TAR) were treated at St. Marianna University Hospital from December 1980 to July 1995. Causes of TAR were due to vehicle accidents in 14 patients and fall in one patient. On diagnosis, contrast-enhanced CT scan was routinely performed in the patients with blunt chest trauma associated with superior mediastinal widening, loss of the aortic knob or right shift of the trachea on the initial roentgenogram. When CT scan demonstrated specific signs for TAR, pseudoaneurysm formation and/or extravasation of the contrast dye, aortography was eliminated before operation. As a role, operation was performed on an emergency basis as soon as the diagnosis was confirmed. Four cases died due to intrapleural rupture before or immediately after thoracotomy. Nine (82%) of the 11 patients in whom operation was completed survived and are doing well. In one of the 4 patients who underwent operation with simple aortic cross-clamping; paraplegia developed after 30 minutes of spinal ischemia. Left heart bypass with the Bio-Pump without heparin or with an antithrombin agent, argatroban, was used in recent 6 patients. Use of left heart bypass with the Bio-Pump without anticoagulant or with argatroban appears to be promising as a safe adjunct in the repair of TAR, preventing fatal bleeding of other injured organs.

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