BackgroundThe objective of this study was to evaluate the imaging characteristics of pulmonary artery sarcoma (PAS) on pulmonary artery computed tomography angiography (PACTA) that can be used to differentiate between PAS and pulmonary thromboembolic diseases, including chronic thromboembolic pulmonary hypertension (CTEPH) and acute pulmonary embolism (APE).MethodsThe clinical data and imaging characteristics of 12 patients with PAS, 156 patients with CTEPH, and 426 patients with APE who were treated at Beijing Anzhen Hospital from January 2007 to August 2013 were retrospectively analyzed. All patients underwent PACTA before treatment, and the diagnoses of PAS and CTEPH were all confirmed by surgical biopsy.ResultsAll 12 PAS patients were initially misdiagnosed and received inappropriate thrombolytic and/or anticoagulant therapy before they were referred for surgical intervention. The mean time from PACTA to surgical intervention was 5.5±3.7 months (range 2–11 months). On PACTA, the PAS lesion always eclipsed the wall of the pulmonary artery before infiltrating outside the pulmonary artery, which was termed the wall eclipsing sign. This sign was observed in all PAS patients but was not observed in any CTEPH or APE patients.ConclusionsPAS is a rare neoplasm with a poor prognosis, and is easily misdiagnosed as thromboembolic disease. The wall eclipsing sign on PACTA is pathognomonic for PAS, and patients with this sign should be investigated to confirm the diagnosis and should undergo surgical intervention as soon as possible, rather than receiving thrombolytic or anticoagulant therapy.
OBJECTIVESThe objective of the present study was to evaluate short- and mid-term outcomes of the left subclavian artery (LSA) chimney stent implantation (LSACSI) during thoracic endovascular aortic repair (TEVAR), and to summarize our experience with this technique.METHODSFrom June 2010 to September 2012, 59 patients (49 men; mean age of 57.4 ± 13.3 years, range from 26 to 83 years) who underwent TEVAR and LSACSI were enrolled. Patients suffered from Stanford type B aortic dissection (n = 27), penetrating aortic ulcer (n = 18), aortic arch aneurysm (n = 9), pseudoaneurysm of the aortic arch (n = 4) and proximal type I endoleak after TEVAR of aortic dissection (n = 1). Elective settings were performed in 72% and emergent in 38% of all patients. Follow-up was performed at postoperative 3 months, 6 months and yearly thereafter.RESULTSThe technical success rate was 98.3% (58/59), and 69 thoracic stent grafts were used. Sixty-two chimney stents, including 55 uncovered and 7 covered stents, were implanted in 59 LSAs. The overall immediate endoleak rate was 15.3% (9/59); type I endoleak was observed in 5 patients and type II in 4 patients. The difference in the immediate endoleak rate related to the anatomy between the outer and the inner curvature was statistically significant (35 vs 4%, P = 0.018). Chimney stent compression was observed in 3 patients and another stent was deployed inside the first one. Perioperative complications included stroke (3.4%, 2/59) and left upper limb ischaemia (1.7%, 1/59). The median follow-up period was 16.5 (range 1–39 months). The mortality rate during follow-up was 5.4% (3/56). Complications during follow-up included endoleak [overall, n = 8 (14.3%, 8/56); type I, n = 5; type II, n = 3], retrograde type A aortic dissection (n = 1), collapse (n = 3, 5.4%) or occlusion (n = 2, 3.6%) of the chimney stent.CONCLUSIONSShort- and mid-term results showed that it is feasible to preserve the patency of the LSA in TEVAR with the chimney technique for thoracic aortic pathologies close to the LSA. However, TEVAR combined with LSACSI was not advocated for lesions located at the outer curve of the aortic arch due to a high possibility of endoleak.
The clinical features of PAS that may help to differentiate it from PTD are its insidious onset, constitutional symptoms, increased serum inflammatory marker levels, lack of predisposing factors and unresponsiveness to thrombolytic and/or anticoagulation therapy. Typical CTPA features are crucial for suspicion of PAS. Early biopsy or surgery should be performed to confirm the diagnosis of PAS and improve its prognosis.
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