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Ann Thorac Surg 2001;72:1244
© 2001 The Society of Thoracic Surgeons

Invited commentary

Vincent L. Gott, MDa

a The Johns Hopkins Hospital, Department of Cardiac Surgery, 618 Blalock Building, 600 North Wolfe St, Baltimore, MD 21287-4618, USA

Doctor Choudhary and associates have presented a very interesting article on the extremely rare problem of tubercular pseudoaneurysms of the aorta. I personally have not seen a patient with a tubercular aneurysm in my 35 years at the Johns Hopkins Hospital and, in checking the autopsy records of our hospital back to 1889, only 2 patients are recorded. More than 50,000 autopsies were done during this time period. One of these patients died of a ruptured aneurysm of the upper abdominal aorta and the second patient had a small unruptured aneurysm in the distal thoracic aorta secondary to a large eroding paraaortic lymph node. This latter patient died of diffuse miliary tuberculosis secondary to the eroding lymph node.

Two of Choudhary’s patients received a tubular graft and two received patch grafts; all four of these patients have done well. Their only mortality occurred in patient 3 who had a large pseudoaneurysm of the ascending aorta; direct closure of a small vent in the ascending aorta was carried out without a patch. This patient died 8 months later at a redo operation, which emphasizes that direct closure in this situation was probably not appropriate. Obviously, and they would agree, tubular graft replacement is the procedure of choice in these patients; patch grafting should only be used as a last resort.

Dr Choudhary and colleagues are to be congratulated on their excellent results with this difficult problem.


Related Article

Tubercular pseudoaneurysms of aorta
Shiv Kumar Choudhary, Anil Bhan, Sachin Talwar, Mukesh Goyal, Sanjeev Sharma, and Panangipalli Venugopal
Ann. Thorac. Surg. 2001 72: 1239-1244. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF]




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