In case of the need for emergency cardiopulmonary bypass (CPB), the right femoral artery and femoral vein were cannulated, and the bypass and cooling processes were initiated. The chest was then reopened at a temperature of 30 °C, and the giant pseudoaneurysm (90x75 mm) around the ascending aorta and the area around the right atrium was exposed. We were also aware that the pseudoaneurysm sac could have been injured should an attempt have been made to insert the retrograde cardioplegia cannula. After aortic cross-clamping, the right atrial fistula was externally occluded, the pseudoaneurysm sac was opened, and cardiac arrest was warranted with the aim of selective antegrade blood cardioplegia (warm induction) through the left coronary ostium. After the sac was opened, the thrombus was cleaned, and the right atrium fistula was primarily sutured (Figure 2). The ascending aortic graft anterior defect measured 11 mm in diameter, and the detached and totally thrombosed right coronary ostium could also be observed. The thrombosed right coronary artery ostium was then ligated, and the bypass was completed using the saphenous vein. After the anastomosis, cardioplegia infusion was repeated selectively for both coronary arteries. In addition, we noted that the aortic valve was functioning normally, and the suture line was intact. The defect in the ascending aorta was then closed with a Dacron patch, and the patient was weaned off of CPB with inotropic support. The multi-organ failure process began to improve daily during the postoperative course, and he was eventually discharged on the postoperative 30th day.
Figure 2: Intraoperative view showing the cardiac defects (arrows).
A pseudoaneurysm of the aorta usually appears following cardiac surgery at several locations in the aorta, particularly at sites where an aortotomy and graft anastomosis were performed because of a diseased aortic wall or a lack of attention paid to the anastomosis. In rare cases, infection adjacent to the aorta or prosthetic valve endocarditis may also cause this condition.[4,5]
Additional fistulous connections between the pseudoaneurysm of the aorta and a cardiac chamber are an extremely rare complication following root replacement,[6] with both right coronary artery total detachment/thrombosis and fistula-related left-to-right heart chamber shunts being the primary reasons for the poor clinical condition of patients.
A Cabrol shunt is a technique used for uncontrolled bleeding following aortic root operations. This shunt, which closes spontaneously but rarely stays open, can cause aorto-right atrial fistula. This complication is noted more frequently in patients who had Cabrol shunts and is a rarely seen in those for whom those shunts were not used. Many cases of pseudoaneurysms have been reported, but the symptoms that our patient displayed are highly unusual.[7] However, the case reported by Ömeroğlu et al.[8] was similar except that their patient experienced no coronary artery thrombosis and a large left-to-right shunt was not used during the procedure. Despite these differences, the clinical signs, such as inferior myocardial ischemia, were very similar, and the condition of our patient was also poor. Due to the total detachment and ostial thrombosis of the right coronary artery, a bypass procedure was planned, and after distal anastomosis, the cardioplegia regimen was repeated.
In conclusion, the formulation of a pseudoaneurysm along with a right atrial fistula due to button total detachment is a late and unusual complication of the Bentall procedure, and patients that are scheduled to undergo this procedure who also have a history of MI must be evaluated with CT to exclude procedurerelated complications.
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.
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