The simple device developed in this study may enable regulation of PBF through a small vascular graft and help to prevent severe morbidity and mortality in the clinical setting of BTS.
Objectives
This study aimed to determine whether drug‐coated balloon (DCB) angioplasty following intraplaque wiring and the use of modified balloons is safe and effective in the percutaneous treatment of coronary chronic total occlusions (CTOs).
Background
DCB is an alternative therapeutic option without the limitations of permanent vascular implants. However, its efficacy in CTOs has yet to be confirmed. The combination of modified balloons and DCB can be effectively applied when the intraplaque passage of the guidewire is achieved in CTOs.
Methods
Data from 124 consecutive CTO lesions (105 patients) treated at our hospital between February 2016 and December 2020 were screened for inclusion and retrospectively analyzed. Among the 118 lesions successfully recanalized, intraplaque wiring was achieved in 108, and 85 were treated by the DCB‐only approach following cutting/scoring balloon dilatation.
Results
Follow‐up data were available for 82 lesions (71 patients). The median occlusion length was 18.5 mm, and the J‐CTO score was 1.7 ± 0.9. No in‐hospital major adverse cardiac events occurred, including abrupt vessel closure. During the median 29‐month follow‐up period, target lesion revascularization was performed for 10 lesions. Follow‐up coronary angiography (8.7 ± 3.9 months after the index procedure) was performed for 64 lesions, demonstrating late lumen loss of −0.15 mm (interquartile range −0.4 to 0.23 mm), binary restenosis (diameter stenosis ≥50%) in 12 lesions (18.8%), and late lumen enlargement in 37 (57.8%).
Conclusion
The DCB‐only approach following the use of modified balloons is a promising strategy for coronary CTOs when intraplaque wiring is achieved.
Objective
Total arch replacement is commonly used for acute aortic dissection type A at some facilities, especially since open stent grafting became commercially available in Japan. Left subclavian artery (LSCA) reconstruction involves deep view manipulation, is difficult to expose and anastomose, and involves the risk of complications and surrounding vascular injury.
Methods
We evaluated 137 patients (mean age 73.8 ± 15.6 years) who underwent total arch replacement for acute aortic dissection type A, at our hospital between September 2014 and March 2022, and divided them into two groups: 70 patients for total arch replacement with fenestrated open stent technique (FeneOS), and 67 for conventional total arch replacement with the reconstruction of three-branch cerebral vessels. We performed FeneOS by deploying the graft from the entry of the left subclavian artery into the descending aorta and fenestrating the LSCA side of the stenting portion. The four-branched artificial vessel was then anastomosed between the left common carotid artery and LSCA.
Results
The surgical results of FeneOS were satisfactory and enabled significant reductions in operative time, selective cerebral perfusion time, cardiopulmonary bypass time, and lower body circulatory arrest time. Long-term observation (mean follow-up = 5.5 years) showed no left recurrent laryngeal nerve palsy or postoperative problems with left subclavian artery blood flow.
Conclusions
FeneOS can minimize LSCA exposure because there is no need for LSCA reconstruction, reducing operation time and avoiding the risk of left recurrent laryngeal nerve injury and bleeding problems associated with LSCA exposure and anastomosis during left subclavian artery exposure.
Background
Open repair is the most promising curative treatment option for patients with chronic type B aortic dissection. However, based on our experience, following the accidental detection of intra-pleural adhesions during open surgery for chronic type B aortic dissection, complete replacement of the diseased aorta cannot be accomplished. To overcome this problem, we switched the procedure to create a distal landing zone for subsequent endovascular repair by replacing the distal aorta with a vascular graft.
Case presentation
We report two cases in which open repair was attempted; however, the proximal descending thoracic aorta could not be exposed due to the presence of severe adhesion in the pleural cavity. In these patients, we accessed the lower descending thoracic aorta or thoracoabdominal aorta and created a distal landing zone for subsequent endovascular repair by replacing the aorta with a vascular graft. Thereafter, endovascular repair was performed with good outcomes.
Conclusions
Replacement of the distal aorta, which is typically easy to access despite the presence of intra-pleural adhesions, with a vascular graft serves as a reliable distal landing zone for subsequent endovascular repair. This method may be a viable option for the management of severe adhesions accidentally detected in the pleural cavity during open repair for chronic type B aortic dissection.
This case report describes a 20-year-old man, who was a drug abuser, and was treated surgically for tricuspid valve endocarditis. He presented with fever, caused by tricuspid valve endocarditis with a lung abscess. Blood culture detected Staphylococcus aureus and cardiac ultrasonography showed tricuspid insufficiency and tricuspid valve vegetation. He was treated with intravenous antibacterial agents, but the inflammation signs did not improve. He had a large number of puncture scars, as a consequence of selfinjection of drugs in his lower arm. He underwent tricuspid valve plasty, and recovered successfully. He was discharged 2 weeks after surgery, and we instructed him to return for follow-up examination in our hospital. However, he did not return to our hospital because he was arrested for drug possession. In such cases, it is necessary to consider the operative method relative to reuse of drugs in the postoperative management of medication.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.