Figure 2. Magnetic resonance imaging.
After median sternotomy with the right brachial artery and caval cannulation cardiopulmonary bypass initiated, and the patient was cooled down to 27°C. Cross-clamp was placed on distal ascending aorta, and antegrade and retrograde cardioplegia were delivered and aortotomy was done. The flap was just above the orifice of right coronary artery. Aortic leaflets were normal and aortic valve coaptation was well. Dacron graft was sutured at supracoronary position. The pump flow was lowered to 650 mL/min and clamps were placed on the truncus brachiocephalicus and left common carotid artery. Dissection was not continue beyond the origin of the truncus brachiocephalicus. Another dacron graft was sutured to the arcus aorta as in hemi-arc replacement. After that, cross-clamp was placed distal of the graft and other clamps were removed, and turned back to normal flow. Two grafts were anastomosed to each other and clamps were removed and after rewarming cardiopulmonary bypass was ended. Cardiopulmonary bypass time was 101 minutes, aortic cross-clamp time was 77 minutes and selective antegrade cerebral perfusion time was 17 minutes. There was no aortic insufficiency with transeosophagial echocardiography. The patient was delivered to the ward on postoperative first day with no hemodynamic or neurological problem. The urine output, urea and creatinin values were normal postoperatively and the patient continued to the same immunosupressive treatment as preoperatively and he was discharged on the 10th day. The patient was in good condition at 3rd postoperative month.