Welkom bij THIM Hogeschool voor Fysiotherapie & Bohn Stafleu van Loghum
THIM Hogeschool voor Fysiotherapie heeft ervoor gezorgd dat je Mijn BSL eenvoudig en snel kunt raadplegen. Je kunt je links eenvoudig registreren. Met deze gegevens kun je thuis, of waar ook ter wereld toegang krijgen tot Mijn BSL. Heb je een vraag, neem dan contact op met helpdesk@thim.nl.
Om ook buiten de locaties van THIM, thuis bijvoorbeeld, van Mijn BSL gebruik te kunnen maken, moet je jezelf eenmalig registreren. Dit kan alleen vanaf een computer op een van de locaties van THIM.
Eenmaal geregistreerd kun je thuis of waar ook ter wereld onbeperkt toegang krijgen tot Mijn BSL.
Login
Als u al geregistreerd bent, hoeft u alleen maar in te loggen om onbeperkt toegang te krijgen tot Mijn BSL.
TEE of transversal cross section of the descending aorta at the same level as depicted in Fig. 1a, showing the true and false aortic lumen. Slow rotating blood flow existed in the false lumen.
A 58-year-old male patient has a history of a Stanford type A aortic dissection running up to the left common iliac artery for which a composite aortic valve graft replacement was performed approximately three years ago. This time, the patient presented with fever and chills. We performed a transesophageal echocardiography (TEE), which excluded vegetations.
Upon retracting the TEE probe, the descending aorta showed two compartments (Fig. 1a) separated by a dissected intimal layer (Fig. 1a, arrow heads); the largest compartment is the false lumen (Fig. 1a, hash). Colour Doppler imaging showed laminar flow through the true aortic lumen (Fig. 1a, asterisk). In the false aortic lumen, slow rotating blood flow existed (online video). This phenomenon was not present more proximally in the descending aorta at the aortic arch (Fig. 1b). Residual blood flow may persist in the false lumen years after aortic dissection because of multiple fenestrations in the dissected intimal layer providing entry and exit locations for blood flow. In approximately 70% of patients with acute type A aortic dissection, the dissection extends beyond the ascending aorta [1‐3]. After repair, these patients show an increased risk of developing post-dissection aortic aneurysm mainly through false lumen dilatation, requiring late distal aortic re-interventions in up to one-fifth of cases [3, 4]. False lumen patency appeared to be a major risk factor for late re-intervention and was associated with an accelerated annual growth rate [3‐5]. Therefore, long-term follow-up and close surveillance of these patients are imperative.
Fig. 1
Transverse cross-sectional views of the descending aorta at different levels as documented with TEE. a Transversal cross section of the descending aorta showing two compartments separated by a dissected intimal layer (arrow heads). The largest compartment is the false lumen (hash). Colour Doppler showed laminar flow through the true aortic lumen (asterisk) and no entry site to the false lumen. In the false lumen, slow rotating blood flow existed. See also online video. b Transversal cross section of the aorta more proximally at the aortic arch. Here, slow rotating blood flow in the false lumen was not observed. Asterisk true aortic lumen, hash false aortic lumen, arrow heads dissection layer
×
Open Access This article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided you give appropriate credit to the original author(s) and the source, provide a link to the Creative Commons license, and indicate if changes were made.
Het Netherlands Heart Journal wordt uitgegeven in samenwerking met de Nederlandse Vereniging voor Cardiologie. Het tijdschrift is Engelstalig en wordt gratis beschikbaa ...
TEE of transversal cross section of the descending aorta at the same level as depicted in Fig. 1a, showing the true and false aortic lumen. Slow rotating blood flow existed in the false lumen.