Partial Thrombosis of the False Lumen in Patients with Acute Type B Aortic Dissection

A cohort of 201 patients with type B acute aortic dissection was classified according to whether the false lumen of the aorta was patent, partially thrombosed, or completely thrombosed. Patients with partial thrombosis had a significantly higher mortality rate at 3 years. In patients with type B acu...

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Veröffentlicht in:The New England journal of medicine 2007-07, Vol.357 (4), p.349-359
Hauptverfasser: Tsai, Thomas T, Evangelista, Arturo, Nienaber, Christoph A, Myrmel, Truls, Meinhardt, Gabriel, Cooper, Jeanna V, Smith, Dean E, Suzuki, Toru, Fattori, Rossella, Llovet, Alfredo, Froehlich, James, Hutchison, Stuart, Distante, Alessandro, Sundt, Thoralf, Beckman, Joshua, Januzzi, James L, Isselbacher, Eric M, Eagle, Kim A
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container_end_page 359
container_issue 4
container_start_page 349
container_title The New England journal of medicine
container_volume 357
creator Tsai, Thomas T
Evangelista, Arturo
Nienaber, Christoph A
Myrmel, Truls
Meinhardt, Gabriel
Cooper, Jeanna V
Smith, Dean E
Suzuki, Toru
Fattori, Rossella
Llovet, Alfredo
Froehlich, James
Hutchison, Stuart
Distante, Alessandro
Sundt, Thoralf
Beckman, Joshua
Januzzi, James L
Isselbacher, Eric M
Eagle, Kim A
description A cohort of 201 patients with type B acute aortic dissection was classified according to whether the false lumen of the aorta was patent, partially thrombosed, or completely thrombosed. Patients with partial thrombosis had a significantly higher mortality rate at 3 years. In patients with type B acute aortic dissection, those with partial thrombosis had a significantly higher mortality rate at 3 years. Acute aortic dissection is a dangerous condition with high in-hospital and follow-up mortality rates. Dissections confined to the descending aorta (type B) have better in-hospital survival than those involving the ascending aorta (type A). Up to 89% of patients with uncomplicated type B dissections survive to hospital discharge after receiving effective antihypertensive therapy. 1 However, despite a low in-hospital mortality, the short- and long-term prognosis of patients with type B acute aortic dissection after discharge from the hospital is heterogeneous, with reported survival rates ranging from 56 to 92% at 1 year and from 48 to 82% at 5 years. 2 – . . .
doi_str_mv 10.1056/NEJMoa063232
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subjects Acute Disease
Age Factors
Aged
Aneurysm, Dissecting - complications
Aneurysm, Dissecting - mortality
Aortic Aneurysm - complications
Aortic Aneurysm - mortality
Biological and medical sciences
Blood and lymphatic vessels
Blood clots
Cardiology. Vascular system
Cardiovascular disease
Coronary vessels
Discharge
Diseases of the aorta
Female
Follow-Up Studies
General aspects
Humans
Incidence
Kaplan-Meier Estimate
Male
Medical prognosis
Medical sciences
Middle Aged
Mortality
Prognosis
Registries
Risk
Thrombosis - diagnosis
Thrombosis - epidemiology
Thrombosis - etiology
Vascular Patency
title Partial Thrombosis of the False Lumen in Patients with Acute Type B Aortic Dissection
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