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2 lis 2022 · The “2022 ACC/AHA Guideline for the Diagnosis and Management of Aortic Disease” provides recommendations to guide clinicians in the diagnosis, genetic evaluation and family screening, medical therapy, endovascular and surgical treatment, and long-term surveillance of patients with aortic disease across its multiple clinical presentation ...
- Endovascular Versus Open
Aneurysms that originate in the descending thoracic aorta...
- Acute Aortic Intramural Hematoma
Background—Acute aortic intramural hematoma (IMH) is an...
- Cardiovascular Imaging
Therefore, previous reports have suggested indexing aortic...
- Circulation
National Center. 7272 Greenville Ave.Dallas, TX 75231....
- Figure 3
Studies suggest an incidence of 2.6 to 3.5 cases per 100 000...
- View PDF
Explore a collection of AHA/ASA journals covering various...
- Thoracic and Abdominal Aortic Aneurysms
However, one important limitation is that these 2 study...
- Vascular Graft Infections, Mycotic Aneurysms, and Endovascular Infections
Thoracic and abdominal aortic MAs are relatively uncommon...
- Endovascular Versus Open
26 sty 2017 · The most common location for aortic mural thrombi is within the descending aorta (37.5%), 33 and more than one treatment strategy may be required. The best management for patients with TAMT is not well established in the literature.
Computed tomography, magnetic resonance imaging, and echocardiographic imaging of patients with aortic disease should follow recommended approaches for image acquisition, measurement and reporting of relevant aortic dimensions, and the frequency of surveillance before and after intervention.
The JACC Central Illustration for the ACC/AHA Aortic Disease Guideline identifies the updated surgical intervention thresholds for sporadic aortic root and ascending aortic aneurysms. This clinician tool focuses on Top 10 Take-Home Message #4 and represents a major change in clinical practice.
21 lip 2022 · Successful management, as defined by thrombus resolution, regression, or exclusion, was achieved in 82% of patients receiving medical treatment, 100% receiving endovascular treatment, 50% receiving surgical treatment, and 86% overall.
Treatment of thrombus (therapeutic anticoagulation, thrombectomy, thrombolysis, open surgical intervention, endovascular bare-metal stent or covered graft implantation, and hybrid approach), in-hospital local (wound complications and need for amputation) or systemic complications (pneumonia, renal tract infection, renal failure, and bowel ischem...
Treatment strategies span medical management with anticoagulation alone to more invasive measures, including open thrombectomy, surgical replacement, and endovascular exclusion. Given the relatively small. From the Division of Vascular and Endovascular Surgery, Department of Sur-gery, Cooper University Hospital.