We demonstrate our initial experience and first results of the endovascular aneurysm sealing (EVAS) technology with chimney grafts for the treatment of paravisceral aneurysms. We present a consecutive series of seven patients with a mean age of 75 years who had been treated by four-vessel-chimney EVAS (ChEVAS) between May 2014 and May 2015. All patients were ASA grade ≥ III and were not eligible for fenestrated/branched endovascular aortic repair (fEVAR/brEVAR) due to urgency ( = 5) or anatomical constraints ( = 2). Total 28 renovisceral target vessels were treated by balloon-expandable covered stents and 14 Nellix devices were used to seal the paravisceral aorta. Overall, 16 Nellix (Endologix Inc., Irvine, California, United States) devices and 65 covered stents were implanted with a technical success of 100%. Perioperatively, one patient with ruptured aneurysm died due to respiratory failure following splenic laceration/splenectomy (mortality = 14%) and in one patient, laceration of an axillary access vessel occurred. At a median follow-up of 6 months, all six surviving patients were well and no reinterventions were necessary. One chimney was found occluded without clinical sequelae resulting in a patency rate of 96%. Four-vessel ChEVAS may serve as alternative treatment option in highly selected cases of either acute paravisceral aortic pathology and/or situations, where the implantation of fEVAR/brEVAR is hampered by anatomical constraints. Further follow-up and a multicenter study are of course warranted to corroborate these initial results.
Background Prosthetic vascular grafts placed surgically or via endovascular techniques can be subject to the risk of life-threatening graft infections. The Omniflow II vascular prosthesis is a biosynthetic graft that was reported to have favorable properties in resisting infections.
Materials and Methods We retrospectively reviewed our 3 years' experience of using the Omniflow II prostheses for aortoiliac reconstructions in patients considered to carry a substantial risk of subsequent prosthetic graft infections (prevention group) as well as in patients with actively infected prosthetic vascular grafts (treatment group).
Results Aorto-bi-iliac (n = 4) and aortobifemoral (n = 12) vascular reconstructions were performed using bifurcated Omniflow II prostheses in nine patients in the prevention group and seven patients in the treatment group. During mean follow-up of 28.6 ± 17.2 months, there was one case of graft infection (6.3%) and graft thrombosis (6.3%) with subsequent successful thrombectomy. Early and late surgical revisions were required in eight (50%) and two (12.6%) patients, respectively. All graft prostheses were patent at last follow-up.
Conclusion Using bifurcated Omniflow II vascular prostheses in patients with or at a high risk of vascular graft infection is advisable, and is associated with acceptable reinfection and patency rates.
Purpose
To assess outcomes of a low-profile thoracic stent-graft in the treatment of thoracic aortic pathologies.
Methods
A retrospective analysis of all consecutive patients with aortic thoracic pathologies treated with the RelayPro device in two university hospitals between October 2018 and July 2019.
Results
23 patients (65% men; mean age 63.4 ± 15 years) were treated. Pathologies included aortic dissections (n = 10), 5 residual type A (22%) and 5 type B (22%), 6 degenerative aortic aneurysms (26%), 4 penetrating aortic ulcers (17%), and aortic erosion, intramural hematoma and aortic rupture (n = 1 and 4% in each case). Two cases (9%) were emergent and two urgent. Proximal landing was achieved in zones 0 (4%), 1 (4%), 2 (43%), and 3 (26%). Five grafts were frozen elephant trunk extensions. Technical success was 100% with accurate device deployment in the intended landing zone of the aortic arch in all 23 patients and with no Ia/III endoleaks and three (13%) type II endoleaks. Apposition was adequate in 96%. Two patients had post-implantation syndromes (one fever, one leukocytosis). Mean follow-up was 11.6 ± 3.7 months (range, 2–16) with no other complications, secondary interventions or conversions to open surgery. There was no 30-day mortality and no aortic-related mortality; all-cause mortality was 4% during follow-up.
Conclusion
A 3–4 French reduced profile in the current generation of stent-grafts facilitates TEVAR particularly in patients with smaller vessels access. Early safety and effectiveness outcomes are favorable, even in endpoints such as deployment accuracy and apposition which may be surrogates for longer-term clinical success and durability.
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