We have been implanting endovascular stent grafts (EVG) via midsternotomy for distal aortic arch surgery since February 1997. The early clinical results are evaluated.
Methods: There were 11 true aneurysms (8 fusiform, 3 saccular) and one chronic type B dissection. The average age was 68 yr (63-81). EVGs were PTFE-covered two-8 bend Z stents in the first eight cases and made with the same stents and ultrathin woven Dacron grafts in the last four cases.
Results: Total arch replacement and aortocoronary bypass grafting were combined in one and two patients, respectively. The average retrograde cerebral perfusion time was 42+/-8 min. The cardiopulmonary bypass time averaged 211+/-26 min. All patients awoke early after operation (4.5+/-1.2 h). All but one case was extubated within 24h. There was no operative mortality, but paraplegia and cerebral infarction were complicated in one case each. Their maximum diameter (73.9+/-21.2mm) decreased significantly after operation (68.7+/-20.1mm) and one year thereafter (63.1+/-16.0 mm). True aneurysms were thrombosed completely. A chronic type B dissection revealed impending rupture due to false lumen infection one year after operation. The whole descending aorta replacement was performed but the patient died 6 months thereafter due to cerebro-vascular complication.
Conclusion: Implantation of EVGs reduces operative invasion for distal arch surgery. This procedure should improve mortality, while long-term results have not been clarified.