Cryosurgery dates back to the 19th century, with the description of the benefits of local application of cooling for conditions such as pain control. Once commercial liquefied gases became available, more progress was made in the use of cryotherapy for localized lesions. As understanding of disease response to freezing increased, safer techniques for performing freezing procedures helped prepare its clinical application in different clinical situations, such as prostate disease and bronchial cancers. Cryosurgical techniques are less invasive and have lower morbidity compared with surgical resection. However, the use of cryosurgery has been limited by a lack of good understanding of the underlying mechanisms of tissue destruction. To apply cryosurgery clinically, and to extend its use, it is important to understand the mechanisms of freeze injury on cells, and to control the thermal parameters.
Porcine aortas may prove to be useful ex-vivo models in the study of aortic dissection haemodynamics. These models are reproducible and may be used in the study of complex haemodynamic forces during the development and propagation of TBAD. Our three porcine models give a potential possibility in helping clinicians isolate and analyse complex haemodynamical factors in the development, propagation and prognosis of TBAD.
Aortic remodeling after TEVAR in chronic dissection is a continuous process. There were no significant differences between chronic dissections and aneurysms in all volumetric parameters. Treating chronic dissections early, before aneurysm formation, did not appear to have a morphologic advantage.
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