Abstract

We report successful surgical treatment of type A aortic dissection in a Jehovah's Witness without the use of any blood products. An interposition graft replacement of the ascending aorta was carried out. This was under right axillo-atrial cardiopulmonary bypass with antegrade cerebral perfusion via right a subclavian and left carotid cannula for 24 minutes at 28°C. Body temperature was kept at 32°C throughout. Autologous transfusion was deployed using cell salvage and a preoperative haemodilution technique. The patient was given tranexamic acid, desmopressin, recombinant factor VIIa, folic acid and epoetin alfa. Patients who object to transfusion represent a significant challenge, especially those who are at a high risk of coagulopathy associated with inherent aortic dissection leading to perturbed haemodynamics, cardiopulmonary bypass and hypothermic circulatory arrest. Type A aortic dissection repair is possible in patients refusing the use of blood products with blood salvage techniques and synthetic products that can limit the risk of bleeding. Minimal hypothermia is vital to preserve platelet function and avoid coagulopathy. Thus, a combination of normothermic/minimal hypothermia and antegrade cerebral protection with a blood conservation strategy can be deployed for a successful surgical outcome in aortic dissection without transfusion.

Highlights

  • Case historyA 55-year-old man presented with acute, tearing chest pain radiating to the back. Computed tomography (CT) confirmed the diagnosis of type A aortic dissection

  • We report successful surgical treatment of type A aortic dissection in a Jehovah’s Witness without the use of any blood products

  • Surgical repair of acute type A aortic dissection has a high risk of postoperative bleeding and coagulopathy, requiring the routine use of blood products.[1]

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Summary

Case history

A 55-year-old man presented with acute, tearing chest pain radiating to the back. Computed tomography (CT) confirmed the diagnosis of type A aortic dissection. The patient was severely hypertensive and drowsy rousable On examination, he had a holodiastolic murmur in the aortic area and all pulses were present. His preoperative haemoglobin level was 17.1g/dl, his international normalised ratio was 1.0 and his activated partial thromboplastin time was 25 seconds. The patient underwent replacement of the ascending aorta with an interposition graft. He was placed on right subclavian-atrial cardiopulmonary bypass (CBP). The ascending aorta was found to be dissected the site of the intimal tear was not identified It was clamped and transacted, and his aortic valve was resuspended in a 28mm dacron interposition tube graft. Following discharge from the critical care unit, the patient was put on antihypertensives, folate and epoetin alfa

Discussion
Aortic dissection
Conclusions
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