We report this extremely rare pathological combination, which has not been reported previously and suggest that the flanged technique may be suitable in the treatment of an ascending aorta aneurysm in a patient with MS.
Telecardiogram showed mediastinal enlargement. Echocardiography revealed ascending aortic aneurysm (approximate 9 cm) combined with severe aortic regurgitation, and there was a circumferential membrane 1 cm above the coronary ostia on the intimal face of the ascending aorta (Fig. 1a). Computed tomography scan demonstrated that the aortic sinuses and ascending aorta were widened up to approximately 9-10 cm.
The patient was taken to the operating room for emergency ascending aorta and root replacement. After median sternotomy, extracorporeal circulation was established through the left femoral artery and the right atrium with cannulation of the superior and inferior vena cavae. Cold oxygenated hyperkalemic blood cardioplegia was used for myocardial protection. Cardioplegic solution was administered by means of direct cannulation of the coronary ostium. The ascending aorta was very large (Fig. 1b) and cross-clamped at the origin of the innominate artery without total circulatory arrest and the ascending aorta was incised longitudinally distally 2 cm from the cross-clamp. The supraaortic vessels were not involved.
The membrane was resected above the coronary sinuses (Fig. 2). Because of the large aortic root and clear aortic regurgitation, we decided to perform root and ascending aortic replacement. Therefore, we used the flanged technique which was described by Yakut[2] We used a 28 mm Dacron vascular graft (Sulzek Vascutek, Scotland) and bileaflet no. 25 prosthetic valve (Sorin Biomedica, ART25LNF, Italy) to build a flanged composite graft. After the surgical procedure, extracorporeal circulation was weaned smoothly. Total cardiopulmonary bypass time was 255 minutes, aortic cross-clamp time was 57 minutes. The patient was extubated on the first postoperative day and the postoperative course was uneventful. The patient remained in the intensive care unit for 52 hours after surgery.
On the 5th postoperative day, a supraclavicular lymph node biopsy was performed on the supraclavicular mass. The specimens measuring 4x2x1 cm were examined in paraffin sections stained with either hematoxylin and eosin or Wright-Giemsa. Histologically, they showed effacement of their primitive architecture, which was substituted by lymphoid nodules, partly bordered by collagen bands and composed of mature lymphocytes intermingled with eosinophils, histiocytes, and lacunar-type Reed-Sternberg (RS) cells. Histopathologic examination was interpreted as nodular sclerotic type Hodgkin lymphoma (Fig. 3).
The patient was discharged on the 20th postoperative day. At the patient's two-year postoperative evaluation, he had fully recovered and was asymptomatic. He is still undergoing chemotherapy for HL.
Early identification of patients with MS is therefore of considerable importance. Without surgery most patients with MS die in the third decade of their lives from complications of aortic root aneurysm, such as aortic rupture, aortic dissection, and aortic insufficiency. Aortic root replacement dramatically improves the survival of these patients. In a recent report by Gott et al.[5] on the results of aortic root replacement in 271 patients with MS, there was no operative mortality among 235 patients operated on electively, and operative mortality was only 5.6% among 36 patients operated on urgently.
Over the past 30 years, composite valve grafting has become a low risk operation and a very durable one for MS. For those patients wishing to avoid anticoagulation therapy two types of valve-sparing operations have been introduced in the early 1990s: reimplantation and remodelling of the aortic root.[6]
The results of aortic valve-sparing operations in patients with MS have been excellent during the first decade. The long-term results of valve-sparing aortic root replacement, and the overall incidence of all valverelated and aorta-related complications in large numbers of patients with MS are still unknown. Because our patients had severely aortic insufficiency, we performed aortic root replacement with flanged technique without valve-sparing treatment.
Supravalvular aortic membrane is a rare congenital anomaly and it can occur alone or in association with other cardiac anomalies. Cardiac pathologies like coronary artery aneurysm, intracardiac defects or other types of left ventricular outflow tract obstructions can be observed.[1] Our patient had a supravalvular membrane, but he had no ascending aortic narrowing and outflow tract obstruction. It is possible that aortic root enlargement might have occurred due to both the supravalvular aortic membrane and the ascending aortic aneurysm associated with MS.
Several diseases are described in association with HL. There have been also some reports of simultaneous occurrence of HL and pulmonary tuberculosis, multiple myeloma, including one of a case with eosinophilic granuloma and after transplantation. We encountered no report of simultaneous cardiac disease and malignant lymphoma in the literature. To our knowledge no cases with ascending aortic aneurysm, supravalvular aortic membrane, MS and HL have been reported. In addition, known and unknown factors could have a role in the pathogenesis of several processes. Radiation can affect all the structures in the heart, including the pericardium, the myocardium, the valves and the conduction system. Radiation therapy and cancer chemotherapy are associated with a wide range of vascular toxicities, which may be related to endothelial cell damage by these agents. Although some patients have developed aortic dissection after HL therapy,[7] in our case there was no prior history of irradiation or chemotherapy.
Finally, we consider that the flanged technique is feasible for treatment of MS. Although the ascending aortic dilatation may be associated with Marfan's syndrome and supraaortic membrane, this unusual constellation including four pathologies might be mere coincidence.
Declaration of conflicting interests
The authors declared no conflicts of interest with respect
to the authorship and/or publication of this article.
Funding
The authors received no financial support for the
research and/or authorship of this article.
1) Brown JW, Ruzmetov M, Vijay P, Turrentine MW. Surgical
repair of congenital supravalvular aortic stenosis in children.
Eur J Cardiothorac Surg 2002;21:50-6.
2) Yakut C. A new modified Bentall procedure: the flanged
technique. Ann Thorac Surg 2001;71:2050-2.
3) Gürbüz A, Tetik Ö, Lafçı B, Özsöyler İ. Mitral annular plication
and valve replacement in a patient with Marfan's syndrome:
a case report. T Klin Kalp-Damar Cerrahisi Dergisi
2002;3:174-6.
4) Fabricius AM, Autschbach R, Doll N, Mohr W. Acute aortic
dissection during pregnancy. Thorac Cardiovasc Surg
2001;49:56-7.
5) Gott VL, Greene PS, Alejo DE, Cameron DE, Naftel DC,
Miller DC, et al. Replacement of the aortic root in patients
with Marfan's syndrome. N Engl J Med 1999;340:1307-13.