1946
DOI: 10.1136/hrt.8.4.191
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Chronic Dissecting Aneurysms

Abstract: In 1939 East was able to find records of only 27 instances in which the diagnosis of dissecting aneurysm had been made during life. Usually death from complete rupture of the aorta quickly follows the initial dissection; of the 300 cases collected by Shennan (1934) 210 died within a week and survival for more than a year was recorded in only 16 cases. We have, therefore, thought it desirable to record two cases in which the diagnosis was made during life; one patient survived for three years and the other is a… Show more

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Cited by 12 publications
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“…The patient's progress was followed at monthly intervals through June 6,1957, with practically the same complaints as before. An abdominal flat plate taken during that time showed a curved linear shadow at the level of and just lateral to, the left of the first lumbar vertebra (fig.…”
Section: Results Of Routine Laboratory Studies Includingmentioning
confidence: 81%
“…The patient's progress was followed at monthly intervals through June 6,1957, with practically the same complaints as before. An abdominal flat plate taken during that time showed a curved linear shadow at the level of and just lateral to, the left of the first lumbar vertebra (fig.…”
Section: Results Of Routine Laboratory Studies Includingmentioning
confidence: 81%
“…Survival is usually dependent on re-entry of the dissection into the aortic lumen. Jones and Langley (1946) estimated that re-entry occurred in 90 per cent of those surviving longer than 5 weeks. In surviving cases, the false channel may become established and sometimes endothelialized, producing the so-called double-barrelled aorta.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%