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Case Reports
. 1986;9(3):142-5.
doi: 10.1007/BF02577924.

Aortic dissection following coronary artery bypass surgery: diagnosis by CT

Case Reports

Aortic dissection following coronary artery bypass surgery: diagnosis by CT

A G Archer et al. Cardiovasc Intervent Radiol. 1986.

Abstract

We describe an unusual case of aortic dissection causing spinal cord infarction. The dissection arose from an intimal tear at the suture line of a coronary artery bypass graft. CT was used to diagnose the dissection and to demonstrate its extension to the aortoiliac bifurcation and innominate artery and its rupture into the left pleural cavity. The most common causes of intimal tears following cardiac bypass surgery are aortic cross-clamping, aortic cannulation, and injury during suturing of the graft to the aorta. An underlying disease of the aorta such as atherosclerosis, cystic medial necrosis, or aortitis is commonly present. CT is an accurate and safe means of detecting aortic dissections following cardiac surgery, and is also useful in assessing the extent of the dissection and identifying its rupture into the pleural or pericardial cavity.

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