Stent graft complications after primary TEVAR were not infrequent and often required secondary procedures for definite treatment. Endoleaks (type Ia), organ malperfusion, stent graft infections, fistula formation and expanding aneurysm occurred predominantly during early and mid-term follow-up. Despite the high-risk nature of the complications, secondary open surgical or interventional procedures may be successfully performed with an acceptable outcome.
Open surgery for extensive thoracic and thoracoabdominal repair in chronic TBAD may be performed with acceptable early and mid-term outcomes. TEVAR for aortic complications in patients with chronic dissection may be successfully performed as a first-stage procedure in order to stabilize the patient and serve as a 'bridge' to secondary open surgery. However, close surveillance is mandatory for the timely detection of aneurysm enlargement, malperfusion or impending rupture after TEVAR.
AOF and ABF represent uncommon but fatal complications-if treated conservatively-after TEVAR that may occur during short- and mid-term follow-up. Surgery for AOF/ABF requires early diagnosis and should be performed promptly and in a radical fashion to totally excise all infected tissues in these high-risk patients.
Extra-anatomic bypass for LCCA or RCCA occlusion allows for early selective cerebral perfusion during AADA repair, and may reduce the risk of neurological complications in patients with preoperative cerebral malperfusion.
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