Clinical study: aortic dissection
Different clinical features of aortic intramural hematoma versus dissection involving the ascending aorta

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Abstract

Objectives

The goal of this study was to test the hypothesis that the absence of direct flow communication through intimal tear in aortic intramural hematoma (AIH) involving the ascending aorta has different clinical impact on clinical course compared with typical aortic dissection (AD).

Background

Although emergent surgical repair has been applied for patients with proximal AIH as if it was typical AD, the natural history of proximal AIH is not known clearly yet.

Methods

Direct comparison of the clinical data of 81 patients with proximal AD and 24 patients with AIH was performed retrospectively.

Results

Patients with AIH were older (67 ± 10 vs. 50 ± 13, p = 0.001), and female gender was more predominant in AIH (19/24 vs. 29/81, p = 0.001). The development of mediastinal hemorrhage and pericardial and pleural effusion was more frequent in patients with AIH than it was in patients with AD. Although medical treatment was more frequently selected in the AIH group (75% vs. 15%, p = 0.001) due to old age and other associated medical diseases, the mortality rate with medical treatment was much lower in patients with AIH than it was in patients with AD (6% vs. 58%, p = 0.003). In follow-up imaging studies of 13 patients who survived AIH without surgical repair, seven patients showed complete resolution. Typical AD developed in three patients, and the other three patients showed focal AD only in the descending aorta. The two-year survival rate did not show significant difference (84% ± 6% in AIH vs. 76% ± 17% in AD, p = 0.47).

Conclusions

Absence of continuous flow communication can explain a more favorable clinical course of AIH than for AD, and medical treatment with frequent imaging follow-up and timed elective surgery in cases with complications can be a rational option for patients with proximal AIH.

Abbreviations

AD
aortic dissection
AIH
aortic intramural hematoma
CT
contrast-enhanced X-ray computed tomography
MRI
magnetic resonance imaging
TEE
transesophageal echocardiography

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