Endovascular stent-graft placement in type B-AD is technically feasible with success rates of >95% in selected cohort. Although minimally invasive, major complications occurred in 14-18% of patients depending upon the acuity of presentation, with very low incidence of paraplegia. Both, acute and mid-term mortality of this novel treatment strategy appear to favourably compare with surgical treatment but further studies are necessary to compare stent-graft placement with medical treatment in uncomplicated AD.
Background-Considering experimental evidence that stem cells enhance myocardial regeneration and granulocyte colony-stimulating factor (G-CSF) mediates mobilization of CD34ϩ mononuclear blood stem cells (MNC CD34ϩ ), we tested the impact of G-CSF integrated into primary percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI) management of acute myocardial infarction in man. Methods and Results-Fifty consecutive patients with ST-segment elevation myocardial infarction were subjected to primary PCI stenting with abciximab and followed up for 6 months; 89Ϯ35 minutes after successful PCI, 25 patients were randomly assigned in this pilot study (PROBE design) to receive subcutaneous G-CSF at 10 g/kg body weight for 6 days in addition to standard care, including aspirin, clopidogrel, an ACE inhibitor, -blocking agents, and statins. By use of CellQuest software on peripheral blood samples incubated with CD45 and CD34, mobilized MNC CD34ϩ were quantified on a daily basis. With homogeneous demographics and clinical and infarct-related characteristics, G-CSF stimulation led to mobilization of MNC CD34ϩ to between 3.17Ϯ2.93 MNC CD34ϩ /L at baseline and 64.55Ϯ37.11 MNC CD34ϩ /L on day 6 (PϽ0.001 versus control); there was no indication of leukocytoclastic effects, significant pain, impaired rheology, inflammatory reactions, or accelerated restenosis at 6 months. Within 35 days, G-CSF and MNC
The PETTICOAT technique may offer a safe and promising adjunctive endovascular maneuver for patients with distal malapposition of the dissecting membrane and false lumen flow. The technique can both abolish distal true lumen collapse and enhance the remodeling process of the entire dissected aorta.
Background-Thoracic endovascular aortic repair (TEVAR) represents a novel concept for type B aortic dissection.Although life-saving in acute emergencies, outcomes and survival of TEVAR in stable dissection are unknown. Methods and Results-One hundred forty patients in stable clinical condition at least 2 weeks after index dissection were randomly subjected to elective stent-graft placement in addition to optimal medical therapy (nϭ72) or to optimal medical therapy alone (nϭ68) with surveillance (arterial pressure according to World Health Organization guidelines Յ120/ 80 mm Hg). The primary end point was all-cause death at 2 years, whereas aorta-related death, progression (with need for conversion or additional endovascular or open surgery), and aortic remodeling were secondary end points. There was no difference in all-cause deaths, with a 2-year cumulative survival rate of 95.6Ϯ2.5% with optimal medical therapy versus 88.9Ϯ3.7% with TEVAR (Pϭ0.15); the trial, however, turned out to be underpowered. Moreover, the aorta-related death rate was not different (Pϭ0.44), and the risk for the combined end point of aorta-related death (rupture) and progression (including conversion or additional endovascular or open surgery) was similar (Pϭ0.65). Three neurological adverse events occurred in the TEVAR group (1 paraplegia, 1 stroke, and 1 transient paraparesis), versus 1 case of paraparesis with medical treatment. Finally, aortic remodeling (with true-lumen recovery and thoracic false-lumen thrombosis) occurred in 91.3% of patients with TEVAR versus 19.4% of those who received medical treatment (PϽ0.001), which suggests ongoing aortic remodeling. Conclusions-In the first randomized study on elective stent-graft placement in survivors of uncomplicated type B aortic dissection, TEVAR failed to improve 2-year survival and adverse event rates despite favorable aortic remodeling. Clinical Trial Registration-URL: http://www.clinicaltrials.gov. Unique identifier: NCT00525356.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.