Frozen elephant trunk infection: To defrost or to debranch?

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Abstract

Infections of frozen elephant trunk hybrid prosthesis (HP) are not well documented in the literature and their management is not standardized yet. We report herein the case of a 59-year-old patient who benefited from a Thoraflex™ HP aortic arch replacement for an acute type A aortic dissection. He presented a year later with a Staphylococcus aureus infection of the proximal part of this prosthesis. We performed a replacement of the proximal compound of the HP accompanied by a complete debranching of the 3 supra-aortic vessels with an inter-carotidal retro-oesophageal bypass. As we left in situ the endovascular graft within the descending aorta, a life-long antibiotic therapy was introduced. The postoperative follow-up was uneventful, and the patient discharged home 2 weeks after his surgery. As an alternative to a more radical redo surgery with major risk, a hybrid medical and surgical treatment of infected frozen elephant trunk could be considered.

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Nader, J., Chabry, Y., Nazih, H., & Caus, T. (2021). Frozen elephant trunk infection: To defrost or to debranch? European Journal of Cardio-Thoracic Surgery, 60(1), 191–193. https://doi.org/10.1093/ejcts/ezaa466

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