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Combined open and endovascular repair of a true right subclavian artery aneurysm without proximal neck
Author(s) -
Ann Van Leemput,
Geert Maleux,
Sam Heye,
André Nevelsteen
Publication year - 2007
Publication title -
interactive cardiovascular and thoracic surgery
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.546
H-Index - 56
eISSN - 1569-9293
pISSN - 1569-9285
DOI - 10.1510/icvts.2006.149088
Subject(s) - medicine , subclavian artery , aneurysm , brachiocephalic artery , radiology , revascularization , surgery , stent , thoracotomy , vertebral artery , median sternotomy , right common carotid artery , common carotid artery , aortic arch , aorta , cardiology , carotid arteries , myocardial infarction
A 52-year-old man, without a medical history, presented with an incidentally detected large, intrathoracic aneurysm of the right subclavian artery. The aneurysm was characterized by the absence of a proximal neck and extended distally close to the origin of the right vertebral artery. We successfully excluded this aneurysm with a combined endovascular and minimally invasive open repair, thereby avoiding a sternotomy or lateral thoracotomy: a stent-graft was placed from the proximal brachiocephalic trunk to the common carotid artery, completely covering the origin of the right subclavian artery. The right subclavian artery was oversewn just distally to the aneurysm and revascularization of the right arm was assured by a carotido-subclavian bypass. Clinical follow-up was uneventful and radiological follow-up by CT-scan showed discrete, but progressive shrinkage of the completely excluded aneurysm.

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