ABSTRACT
A 65-year old unconscious man with left hemiplegia was found to have acute Stanford type A aortic dissection (AAD) and occlusion of the brachiocephalic and right carotid artery. He underwent emergency surgery. Before midline sternotomy, arterial cannulas were inserted into the femoral artery and the true lumen of the right carotid artery and were connected thorough a Y-shaped extracorporeal circulation circuit to restore the cerebral perfusion. During the aortic procedure, both arteries were used as arterial inflow sites.The patient regained consciousness 6 h later and was extubated on the next day. He suffered infarction of the right cerebral hemisphere, but neurologic deficits were totally resolved. He was given an ambulatory discharged 46 days later and has been reinstated in his former job 6 months after the operation. The indications for emergency surgery for AAD complicated by stroke or coma remains controversial. Especially soon after the onset, surgery may be applicable for such AAD patients if neurological deficits are not obviously irreversible.
ABSTRACT
A 44-year-old man who received left ventricular assist device (LVAD) implantation for end-stage heart failure due to dilated cardiomyopathy suffered from mediastinitis. Computed tomography confirmed mediastinitis. His mediastinum was reopened and irrigated. Negative pressure wound therapy (NPWT) was applied to the wound without closing the chest. This system enabled the patient to receive early physical rehabilitation. One year after LVAD implantation, under NPWT, the patient could walk in the general ward, and was waiting for cardiac transplantation. We used some useful materials for NPWT including a coatable non-alcoholic film, flexible sealing sheet, soft exudate absorber, in order to control wound clean, keep air-tight, prevent damage to the skin and to reduce mediastinal instability. LVAD implantation is usually performed as a bridge to transplantation or recovery. One of the most critical complications is intractable mediastinitis. We described a successful infection control of LVAD related mediastinitis with the NPWT.
ABSTRACT
A 10-day-old male neonate underwent repair of mixed-type total anomalous pulmonary venous connection. The left upper pulmonary vein connected to the left innominate vein by way of a vertical vein. The other veins converged to form a common pulmonary vein and drained to the coronary sinus. As the common pulmonary vein was not stenotic, normal coronary sinus unroofing was undertaken and the postoperative course was uneventful. Five months later pulmonary vein stenosis (PVS) occurred at the junction of the common pulmonary vein and coronary sinus. At reoperation the common pulmonary vein was deeply incised to the point near the pulmonary venous orifice, and the stenotic tissue was resected. Although he was discharged from the hospital on the 10th postoperative day, PVS recurred at age 9 months and a second reoperation was undertaken. This time, the common pulmonary vein was excised and the anterior wall of each pulmonary vein was incised to drain independently and directly to the left atrium without causing turbulence. The left upper pulmonary vein was anastomosed to the left atrial appendage. Pulmonary angiography 18 months after the second reoperation revealed the pulmonary venous pathway to be nonstenotic.