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Case Report

Endovascular Treatment of Post-Traumatic Aortic Rupture

Martin Rabellino, MD

 

Hospital Italiano de Buenos Aires, Buenos Aires, Argentina

December 2012
2152-4343

Abstract

The rupture of the abdominal aorta by blunt trauma is extremely rare and represents less than 5% of traumatic injuries of the aorta.1 This pathology is associated with an elevated mortality. Most patients with aortic rupture do not reach the hospital alive and of those who survive until they reach the hospital, 75% die within the first 4 hours.2 We report a case of aortic rupture by blunt trauma in an octogenarian patient. She was admitted to the emergency room in shock and received endovascular therapeutic treatment.

VASCULAR DISEASE MANAGEMENT 2012:9(12):E217-E218
Key words: aortoiliac artery, stent graft, endovascular therapy, endovascular grafts

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Case Report

An 82-year-old female patient suffered multiple fractures from a fall 12 days prior to admission. At admission, she presented with sudden tachycardia and dyspnea. A ventilation/perfusion scan showed a high probability of pulmonary embolism. She received anticoagulation therapy, and orthopedic surgery was planned. 

Prior to the orthopedic surgery, the anticoagulation therapy was suspended. A filter was placed in the inferior vena cava, and the procedure was performed without complications. She was discharged from the hospital.

Figure 1

Five days after the procedure, she was admitted to the emergency department with abdominal pain and hemodynamic instability. A multislice computed tomography (MSCT) scan showed active bleeding in the back of the infrarenal abdominal aorta (Figure 1).  A substraction angiography confirmed the findings of the MSCT (Figure 2A), and then endovascular treatment was performed by placing a 16 x 41mm Advanta V12 Atrium balloon-expandable covered stent (Atrium Medical Corporation), which closed the site of bleeding (Figure 2B).

Figure 2

After 6 days of treatment the patient was discharged with no complications related to the endovascular procedure. 

Discussion

The treatment of aortic rupture traditionally has been conventional surgery, but since the advent of endovascular treatment by placement of a stent graft, this therapeutic modality has gradually become the treatment of choice for ruptured thoracic and abdominal aortic aneurysm.3,4

There is scarce literature about endovascular treatment in blunt trauma of the abdominal aorta and most of them are case reports. This could be due to the low incidence of this pathology and the low percentage of patients who survive. However, the endovascular treatment of aortic rupture when it is below the visceral arteries represents an attractive alternative according Shalhub et al, who recently published a study of 28 patients treated for traumatic rupture of the abdominal aorta with endovascular therapy.2

Endovascular treatment should be considered as first-line treatment in patients with injuries located below the infrarenal level. Besides being less invasive, the procedure is faster with less associated morbidity.

References

  1. Naude GP, Back M, Perry MO, Bongard FS. Blunt disruption of the abdominal aorta: report of a case and review of the literature. J Vasc Surg. 1997;25(5):931-935.
  2. Shalhub S, Starnes BW, Tran NT, et al. Blunt abdominal aortic injury. J Vasc Surg. 2012;55(5):1277-1286.
  3. Midgley PI, Mackenzie KS, Corriveau MM, et al. Blunt thoracic aortic injury: a single institution comparison of open and endovascular management. J Vasc Surg. 2007;46(4):662-668.
  4. Mandawat A, Mandawat A, Sosa JA, Muhs BE, Indes JE. Endovascular repair is associated with superior clinical outcomes in patients transferred for treatment of ruptured abdominal aortic aneurysms. J Endovasc Ther. 2012;19(1):88-95.

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Editor’s Note: Disclosure: The authors have completed and returned the ICMJE Form for Disclosure of Potential Conflicts of Interest. The authors report no conflicts of interest regarding the content herein. 

Manuscript received March 14, 2012, provisional acceptance given April 3, 2012, final version accepted May 29, 2012.

Address for correspondence:  Martin Rabellino, MD, Hospital Italiano de Buenos Aires, J.D. Peron 4190 (C1181ACH) Buenos Aires, Argentina. Email: jose.rabellino@hospitalitaliano.org.ar


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