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. 1989 Sep;80(3 Pt 1):I269-74.

Surgical treatment of aortic root abscess

Affiliations
  • PMID: 2766536

Surgical treatment of aortic root abscess

T E David et al. Circulation. 1989 Sep.

Abstract

A significant number of patients with infective aortic valve endocarditis develop aortic annular abscess. Although antibiotics may occasionally sterilize an aortic root abscess, most patients require surgical intervention. A review of our experience with 21 consecutive patients surgically treated for aortic root abscess disclosed that 13 patients had prosthetic valve and eight had native aortic valve endocarditis. The predominant microorganism was Staphylococcus aureus, particularly in those patients with native aortic valve endocarditis. The abscess was limited to the aortic annulus in 10 patients and was either multiple or had perforated the left ventricular outflow tract in 11 patients. Most patients were desperately ill at the time of operation. Repair was accomplished by aggressive debridement of all apparently infected tissue and reconstruction of the left ventricular outflow tract with autologous pericardium. Although postoperative complications were common, only one patient died in hospital. Operative survivors have been followed up from 3 to 68 months (mean, 29 months). One patient died of complications of repair of a thoracoabdominal aneurysm 34 months after surgery; his prosthetic aortic valve and patch were intact at autopsy. No patient has experienced recurrent infection, pericardial patch aneurysm, or prosthetic valve dehiscence.

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