Background: In patients with aortic dissection, a patent distal false lumen at long-term follow-up leads to complications. We investigated the feasibility of performing an open distal anastomosis using retrograde cerebral perfusion.
Methods: Over a 10-year period, 41 patients with acute type A aortic dissection underwent 43 surgical repairs. In 1991, an open distal anastomosis using retrograde cerebral perfusion (group 2) was introduced to replace the standard aortic cross-clamp method (group 1). The mean retrograde cerebral perfusion time was 47.3 minutes (range, 22 to 67 minutes), and there were no neurologic sequelae in surviving patients.
Results: The operative mortality rate was 18.5% in group 1 and 18.7% in group 2. At long-term follow-up, dilatation of the false lumen (more than 50 mm in diameter) occurred in 9 of 18 patients (50%) in group 1, and 2 patients died of aortic rupture. There were no deaths in group 2, and dilatation of the distal false lumen occurred in only 15.4% of patients (p < 0.05).
Conclusions: The use of retrograde cerebral perfusion in patients with acute aortic dissection provides adequate time to perform a safe, open, distal anastomosis, and could decrease significantly the rate of enlarged, patent, false lumina.