Interventional repair of a vascular aneurysm in a patient with Marfan syndrome

  • Ghonem M
  • Yuan X
  • Mitsis A
  • et al.
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Abstract

Marfan syndrome is a heritable connective tissue disorder affecting skeletal, ocular and cardiovascular systems. Cardiovascular manifestations comprise aneurysmal dilatation of aortic root, aortic dissection and rupture; peripheral arterial aneurysms have been reported in femoral, iliac and subclavian arteries with surgical reconstruction as the first-line therapeutic option. We report a Marfan patient with a symptomatic aneurysm of left subclavian artery in the intrathoracic retro-clavicular space; instead of open surgical resection, an endovascular solution was successfully applied by use of a flexible self-expanding stent-graft (W.L Gore ® Viabahn ® Endoprosthesis 9 × 100 mm) to exclude the aneurysm. This case exemplifies a modern option to manage vascular pathology even in patients with Marfan syndrome. Follow-up over 1 year proved very reassuring with complete remodelling and resolution of the aneurysm; long-term follow-up is certainly warranted, considering the potential of recurrence or initial reactive hyperplasia.

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Ghonem, M. E., Yuan, X., Mitsis, A., & Nienaber, C. A. (2018). Interventional repair of a vascular aneurysm in a patient with Marfan syndrome. SAGE Open Medical Case Reports, 6, 2050313X1878844. https://doi.org/10.1177/2050313x18788448

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