Publication Date

8-31-2023

Journal

Cardiovascular Diagnosis and Therapy

DOI

10.21037/cdt-22-248

PMID

37675092

PMCID

PMC10478019

PubMedCentral® Posted Date

7-6-2023

PubMedCentral® Full Text Version

Post-print

Published Open-Access

yes

Keywords

Aortic disease, aortic dissection, left subclavian artery (LSCA), frozen elephant trunk (FET)

Abstract

The frozen elephant trunk (FET) technique for total aortic arch replacement extends repair into the proximal portion of the descending thoracic aorta. Several techniques and modifications of total arch replacement have been described in the literature, and many of these iterations are related to facilitating the distal anastomosis while preserving flow to the left subclavian artery (LSCA), as well as maintaining posterior circulation of the brain via the vertebral artery, by reducing the circulatory arrest time during reconstruction. Because of the LSCA's posterior and deep anatomic location in the chest, particularly in obese patients, this revascularization is often challenging; additional concerns regarding LSCA revascularization include patients with large aortic arch aneurysms, those with dissected or calcified arteries, and reoperation. A careful plan for reconstruction is necessary. Whether revascularization is performed preoperative, intraoperative, or postoperatively, every effort should be made to include the left subclavian artery as part of the operational approach. Revascularization techniques include reimplantation as part of the island patch or direct anastomosis, stenting, bypass, transposition or a hybrid approach. The importance of maintaining circulation of the LSCA cannot be overstated. Preserving flow to the spinal cord via collaterals minimizes the risk of cord injury during FET procedure. In patients with a patent left internal mammary artery bypass, left arm arteriovenous fistula for hemodialysis, dominant circulation, or direct aortic origin of the left vertebral artery, revascularization is necessary as well. In the case of initial sacrifice, arm claudication or steal syndrome usually dictates delayed extra-anatomic revascularization in the postoperative period.

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