Remodelling of the aorta after a catheter-induced acute aortic dissection

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Abstract

Iatrogenic acute aortic dissection during percutaneous coronary intervention is an extremely rare but critical complication. Although sealing the entry point with a coronary stent is an option to treat localized dissections, more extensive cases may require surgical intervention. We present a case of Type A aortic dissection that occurred during an angioplasty of a chronically occluded right coronary artery. Despite the extent of the dissection, a 'watch-and-wait' strategy was chosen, and repeated imaging a few days later revealed that the aorta had been remodelled to its normal anatomy.

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Antoniou, A., Ntalas, I., Gupta, A., & Attia, R. (2018). Remodelling of the aorta after a catheter-induced acute aortic dissection. European Journal of Cardio-Thoracic Surgery, 53(2), 479–481. https://doi.org/10.1093/ejcts/ezx315

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