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Page 1: George Matalanis, Rhiannon  Koirala Austin Medical Centre Melbourne, Australia

George Matalanis, Rhiannon KoiralaAustin Medical CentreMelbourne, Australia

Branch First Aortic Arch Repair

Aortic Symposium 2010AATS

Without Deep HypothermiaOr Circulatory Arrest

Page 2: George Matalanis, Rhiannon  Koirala Austin Medical Centre Melbourne, Australia

Problems with Current Techniques

Circulatory arrest (CA) Maximum “safe” period Opportunity for air/debris

embolism Deep hypothermia (DH)

Prolonged bypass Coagulopathy

Retrograde Cerebral perfusion Negligible nutritive flow

Unilateral Antegrade Perfusion

Contralateral hypoperfusion

Ipsilateral hyperperfusion Bilateral Antegrade Perfusion

Direct cannulation risks View obstruction

Page 3: George Matalanis, Rhiannon  Koirala Austin Medical Centre Melbourne, Australia

Collateral Anatomy NOT like Carotid Endarterectomy

Without shunt complete reliance on CIRCLE OF WILLIS 15% inadequate ICA stump pressure Even then Stroke risk < 3%

if clamp time < 10-15 min

Page 4: George Matalanis, Rhiannon  Koirala Austin Medical Centre Melbourne, Australia

Collaterals Available in Individual Proximal Arch Branch Clamping

Rightcarotid

Subclavian

Upper body

É Leftcarotid

Externalcarotid É

Internalcarotid

Carotid

É

É

Lower body

Page 5: George Matalanis, Rhiannon  Koirala Austin Medical Centre Melbourne, Australia

Cannulation and bypass

Dual upper and lower body inflow pressure gradients Maintenance of body

perfusion after innominate clamping

Direct Ascending Aorta -alternative in PVD/thoraco-abdominal atheroma

Page 6: George Matalanis, Rhiannon  Koirala Austin Medical Centre Melbourne, Australia

Reconstruction Sequence

Page 7: George Matalanis, Rhiannon  Koirala Austin Medical Centre Melbourne, Australia

Patients 30 cases: Jul 2005- Oct

2009 Male : Female = 19:11 Age: 62 (28-85) Smoking: 57% Hypertension: 63% CVD: 23% CAD: 30%

Elective 18 (60%)

Urgent/Emergent 12 (40%)

Type A dissection 16 (53%)

Re-operation 4 (13%)

Page 8: George Matalanis, Rhiannon  Koirala Austin Medical Centre Melbourne, Australia

Concomitant Procedures

Aortic Root:19 (63%) Valve sparing: 14 (74%)

David: 3 Other valve sparing: 11

Bentall’s: 5 (26%) Mechanical: 3 Tissue: 2

Separate AVR: 2 (7%) Elephant Trunk: 4 (13%)

Regular: 2 Frozen: 2

CABG: 6 (20%)

Page 9: George Matalanis, Rhiannon  Koirala Austin Medical Centre Melbourne, Australia

Early outcomes Mortality: 1 (3.3%)

85 y.o, late presenting Ac Type A Neurological Dysfunction: 4 (13%)

All focal/embolic: Amourosis Fugax Hemianopia, Hemiparesis, Dysphasia.

Complete recovery: 3 Residual deficit: 1 (hemianopia)

Page 10: George Matalanis, Rhiannon  Koirala Austin Medical Centre Melbourne, Australia

Other Morbidity Re-exploration: 3 (10%) Mechanical Cardiac support: 1*(3.3%) Renal support: 1* (3.3%) Tracheostomy: 1 (3.3%) Sternal infection: nil* mortality

Page 11: George Matalanis, Rhiannon  Koirala Austin Medical Centre Melbourne, Australia

Benefits Ventilation < 24 hrs: 12 (40%) ICU stay < 2 days: 14 (47%) Hospital stay ≤ 7 days: 10 (33%) NO TRANSFUSION: 8 (26.7%)

2 of these were re-operative cases

Page 12: George Matalanis, Rhiannon  Koirala Austin Medical Centre Melbourne, Australia

Conclusions Branch First aortic arch repair is a safe procedure :

3.3% Mortality 3.3% permanent Stroke

Applicable to urgent and complex cases Haemostatic

27% no blood/product transfusion Better visceral organ protection

1.3% CVVH Allows complete and unhurried repair

Avoid late deaths from undertreated aortic segments Avoid difficult redo for persistent/recurrent aortic pathology