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Abstract


doi: 10.1583/04-1368.1
Journal of Endovascular Therapy: Vol. 12, No. 1, pp. 103–109.

Intimal Dehiscence in the Abdominal Aorta Following Balloon Fenestration for Type B Dissection

Manuel Maynar, MD1; Roman Rostagno, MD1; Tobias Zander, MD1; Zhong Qian, MD2; Rafael Llorens, MD1; Ignacio Zerolo, M.D1; and Wilfrido R. Castañeda, MD2

1Hospiten Rambla, Las Palmas de Gran Canaria University, Santa Cruz de Tenerife, Spain

2Louisiana State University Health Sciences Center,New Orleans, Louisiana, USA



Purpose: To report a case of intimal dehiscence associated with endovascular intervention in patients with aortic dissection.

Case Report: A 65-year-old man presented with a type B dissection extending to the level of the common iliac arteries. Two Talent stent-grafts were placed in the descending thoracic aorta to close the entry point, but 2 lumens remained. Three days later, abdominal pain prompted another imaging session, which demonstrated a large cylindrical filling defect in the abdominal aorta (“tube-in-tube”) assumed to be a partially or completely dehisced intima. Fenestration marginally improved flow to the visceral vessels, and the patient improved clinically. However, 4 days later, recurrent ischemic symptoms prompted surgery; a complete dehiscence of the aortic intima starting at the descending aorta extended to the distal abdominal aorta. The aorta was resected, but the patient died from disseminated intravascular coagulation.

Conclusions: Intimal flap dehiscence associated with an endovascular procedure in the management of aortic dissection is an uncommon complication. Early detection and prompt surgical intervention of such a complication could save the patient's life. Endovascular procedures are unlikely to resolve the hemodynamic problem caused by a dehisced, distally migrated, collapsed intima.

Keywords: thoracic aorta, abdominal aorta, type B dissection, endovascular repair, stent-graft, complication, intimal dehiscence



© Copyright by International Society of Endovascular Specialists 2005