NONSURGICAL Thoracic Aorta Repair

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barbwil

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This article came in Medical News Today. Do you know of anyone who has had this nonsurgical repair done?? This takes the procedure from the hands of the surgeons and gives it to the interventional radiologists.

Nonsurgical Thoracic Aorta Repair Has Much Less Risk Of Paralysis Than Surgery
07 Mar 2007

According to two studies presented today, a nonsurgical treatment using stent-grafts to repair an injured or diseased thoracic aorta offered patients less risk of paraplegia as well as lower morbidity and mortality rates when compared to surgery. During surgical repair the patient is at increased risk of paraplegia because the thoracic aorta is clamped, cutting off blood to the spinal column. The interventional radiology treatment does not interrupt the blood supply because the endograft is advanced inside the artery, using imaging to guide it from the femoral artery in the groin to the precise location in the aorta where it is deployed to create a new wall in the aorta from the inside.

The London study involved 190 patients in a prospective database from 1997 to 2006. All patients had diseased aortas in the thoracic area, such as degenerative aneurysm, dissections, ulcer, and other pathology. In the second study, coming out of a major trauma center in Canada, all of the patients were healthy without an underlying disease, but had suffered a violent life-threatening injury to the thoracic portion of the aorta. Since there was no underlying pathology, it was clear in the surgical trauma group that adverse events were not due to underlying disease, and could be more clearly attributed to the procedure. In both institutions, the data strongly suggests that the interventional treatment was not only an important option to consider, but should be the treatment of choice.

The incidence of death and permanent paralysis in the London group, which only included the interventional treatment, was 1.6 percent. In the trauma study, which also included a comparison to surgery, there was a 7.4 percent incidence of pneumonia and no incidences of death or paralysis in the interventional patients. In the surgery group, there was an eleven percent incidence of death, a 15.6 percent incidence of paralysis, and a 37.5 percent incidence of pneumonia.

"Repairing a thoracic aorta should primarily be done with a stent-graft. Compared to surgery, the interventional treatment has a much lower risk of paralysis, less than two percent compared to open surgery which has approximately a ten percent risk, even in the best of hands," stated interventional radiologist John Reidy, M.D., of Guys Hospital, London, England. "Placing a stent-graft is minimally invasive and much less traumatic for the patient. They avoid general anesthesia and have less problems with infection because there is no large chest incision." Stent-graft repair is typically covered by insurance, and available in the U.S.

About the Studies

London Abstract 69 - 190 patients (127 men and 63 women) underwent nonsurgical thoracic aorta repair. 128 patients were treated electively and 62 underwent urgent repair. 135 patients were under regional anesthesia (epidural). The stent-grafts were successfully deployed in 99.5 percent of the cases. The incidence of death and permanent paralysis was 1.6 percent. The median follow-up was 20.4 months.

Trauma Abstract 70 Of the 104 patients with acutely injured thoracic aortas, 22 were dead on arrival or died during assessment. 19 patients were treated conservatively, 36 were treated surgically, and 27 received a stent-graft. Both the surgical and nonsurgical patients had similar demographics and co-morbidities. Comparatively:

Stent-graft Surgery
Death during procedure 0 11%
Paralysis 0 15.6%
Pneumonia 7.4% 37.5%
Intra-thoracic nerve damage 0 12.5%

Abstracts 69 and 70 can be found at http://www.SIRmeeting.org.

Thoracic Aorta Information

-- The aorta is the largest artery in the body the part of the aorta that runs through the chest is called the thoracic aorta, when it reaches the abdomen it is called the abdominal aorta.

-- Thoracic aortic aneurysms (TAA) are life-threatening because of the occurrence of massive blood loss when they rupture.

-- TAA is considered a "silent killer," as only half the patients notice symptoms which include jaw, neck and upper back pain; chest or back pain; or difficulty breathing.

-- Of the patients who get to the hospital with a ruptured TAA, only about twenty thirty percent survive.

-- TAA affects approximately 15,000 people in the United States each year.

-- Twenty-five percent of aortic aneurysms occur in the chest.

-- Researchers believe that atherosclerosis, "hardening of the arteries" causes TAA.

About the Society of Interventional Radiology

Interventional radiologists are board-certified physicians who specialize in minimally invasive, targeted treatments. They offer the most in-depth knowledge of the least invasive treatments available coupled with diagnostic and clinical experience across all specialties. They use X-rays, MRI and other imaging to advance a catheter in the body, usually in an artery, to treat at the source of the disease nonsurgically. As the inventors of peripheral angioplasty and the catheter-delivered stent, interventional radiologists pioneered minimally invasive modern medicine, and provide treatments that offer less risk, less pain and less recovery time compared to open surgery. More information can be found at http://www.SIRweb.org.

Society of Interventional Radiology (SIR)
3975 Fair Ridge Dr., Ste 400 N.
Fairfax, VA 22033
United States
 
I haven't yet, but this is my ONLY option when I go to have this next one done. I pray it works.
 
Stents and the Aorta

Stents and the Aorta

Stents were first used in the abdominal aorta. Within roughly the last 2 or 3 years they have been approved for only one area of the thoracic aorta - the descending/thoracoabdominal aorta.

One acronym used is TEVAR (Thoracic Endovascular Aneurysm Repair). Not every aneurysm in this part of the aorta is suitable for a stent. But if someone does meet the criteria, the procedure is done together by an interventional radiologist and an aortic surgeon.

Under "Introduction to Aortic Surgery" at the following link, there is some description of TEVAR.

http://www.cedars-sinai.edu/3885.html#j

Best wishes,
Arlyss
 
The father of one of my best friends had something similar to this done at Duke two or three years ago. He had an anyeurism of the abdominal, not thoracic, aorta.

If memory serves me well, the stent repaired the anyeurism, but an infection where the stent was placed eventually killed him.
 
Thoracic Aorta Compared to Abdominal

Thoracic Aorta Compared to Abdominal

Surgery on the aorta in the abdomen is done by vascular surgeons.

Generally, there is greater awareness of abdominal aortic aneurysms - the term "AAA" is sometimes used.

There is also a perception that AAA's are more common than TAA's (Thoracic Aortic Aneurysms) - but solid data is missing in terms of TAA. No one knows how many TAAD (Thoracic Aortic Aneurysm and/or Dissection) deaths are recorded in error as a massive heart attack.

Imaging by ultrasound generally is used successfully to find AAA, and, thanks to the location, death connected with AAA is more obviously from the aorta.

Routine ultrasound (trans thoracic echocardiography) has limitations in detecting TAA, and death due to TAAD is easily confused with a massive heart attack in the absence of an autopsy.

Surgery on the abdominal aorta came first, because there is no need for a heart lung machine to work on the aorta in the abdomen. Surgery on the thoracic aorta began about 50 years ago.

Best wishes,
Arlyss
 

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