Abstract

Our goal was to present a case of emergent endovascular repair of a ruptured descending aortic aneurysm in an actively arresting patient. The patient was a 75-year-old woman with a known history of a 6.5-cm descending thoracic aortic aneurysm with acute onset of back pain and syncope. A computed tomographic angiogram revealed disruption of the descending thoracic aorta and a mediastinal hematoma. The patient was taken emergently to the operating room. During induction, the patient developed pulseless electrical activity arrest, and cardiopulmonary resuscitation was promptly initiated. The bilateral groins were prepped and draped, and an emergent cutdown was made to gain access to the femoral artery. Wire access of the aortic arch was obtained via a 6F micropuncture sheath, over which a 45- × 45- × 20-mm covered endograft was introduced. Using fluoroscopic guidance alone without angiography, the endograft was rapidly deployed proximally to the level of the distal aortic arch using calcification as a landmark (Fig. CC1-1). Immediately after deployment, the patient regained a pulse, and cardiopulmonary resuscitation was discontinued for a total of 30 minutes of continuous compressions. A right thoracotomy was then performed for evacuation of the hemothorax and ligation of the torn intercostal arteries. The patient was cooled to 35 degrees Celsius for 24 hours post-arrest and a lumbar drain was placed postoperatively. The patient thereafter regained all neurological and end-organ function and at the 6-month follow-up has had no progression of her aneurysm (Fig. CC1-1). Rapid introduction and deployment of a descending thoracic aortic endograft for a ruptured descending aortic aneurysm is safe and effective in an arresting patient.

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