Journal of cardiac surgery
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We describe an unusual presentation of cardiac tamponade as superior vena cava syndrome post minimally invasive mitral valve repair. The tamponade was caused by local compression of junction between the right atrium and superior vena cava. This case illustrates the importance of using transesophageal echocardiogram in postoperative management of cardiac surgery patients.
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Case Reports
Novel approach to the treatment of distal malperfusion secondary to ascending aortic dissection.
Acute Type A dissection is a surgical emergency. The presence of visceral and extremity malperfusion syndromes increases perioperative mortality twofold. On occasion, significant malperfusion may best be addressed in a staged fashion with preliminary attention to specific vascular beds with delayed repair of the dissection itself. We present a subacute Type A dissection associated with malperfusion of multiple vascular beds (mesenteric, renal, and iliofemoral) managed with a complication-specific approach utilizing endovascular thoracoabdominal aortic repair prior to ascending repair.
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We report a case of a patient who developed an aortic dissection with rupture. This presumably was a delayed injury following blunt thoracic trauma and highlights that concerns for aortic pathology even in this patient population.