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Volume 38, Issue 3, Pages 255-261 (September 2009)


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Endovascular Aortic Arch Repair: Hopes and Certainties

M. SchoderaCorresponding Author Informationemail address, J. Lammerb, M. Czernyb

Received 11 June 2009; accepted 11 June 2009. published online 13 July 2009.

Abstract 

For aneurysms and dissections involving the aortic arch, the traditional treatment is open surgical repair requiring cardiopulmonary bypass and deep hypothermic circulatory arrest. Reported mortality rates range from 7% to 17% and neurologic injury rates range from 4% to 12%. Since the first clinical applications of endovascular repair in the early 1990s, this less-invasive treatment modality has evolved steadily. For the treatment of aortic arch pathologies, combined open and endovascular strategies (hybrid procedures) have gained a widespread implementation. Evidence to date proves the feasibility of open surgical branch re-vascularisation followed by endovascular repair into the proximal arch. For hybrid procedures, mortality and stroke rates are given as 0–20%, and 0–8%, respectively. Alternative approaches using fenestrated and branched stent grafts have been considered. Although this technique is challenging and devices are not available widely, it is anticipated that this new technique will expand the range of aortic arch pathologies that can be treated by endovascular means.

a Department of Cardiovascular and Interventional Radiology, Medical University of Vienna, A-1090 Vienna, Austria

b Department of Cardiothoracic Surgery, Medical University of Vienna, Austria

Corresponding Author InformationCorresponding author.

PII: S1078-5884(09)00324-4

doi:10.1016/j.ejvs.2009.06.007


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