Zeitschrift für Kardiologie
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We report on a case of dynamic left ventricular (LV) outflow tract obstruction combined with a prosthetic valve dysfunction 13 years following mitral valve replacement with a Hancock bioprosthesis in a 46-year-old patient. Previously, repeated echocardiographic controls had been performed at regular intervals and the prosthesis had been found to be oversized and seated in abnormal position, with projection of the struts into the LV outflow tract. Moreover, a mild chronic LV outflow tract obstruction had been diagnosed upon intermittent findings of relatively high velocity in the outflow tract. ⋯ The patient was referred for a mitral valve reoperation. The valve was replaced with a Sorin Bileaflet Carbon prosthesis. On the setting of a mild chronic LV outflow obstruction due to the oversized prosthesis and its abnormal position, hypercontractile cardiac function as a result of mitral regurgitation may have caused the dynamic and symptomatic LV outflow tract obstruction.
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Acute aortic rupture is a typical consequence of severe blunt chest trauma often associated with rapid deceleration in car accidents. Initial diagnostic findings are often misleading and multiorgan injuries add to the diagnostic complexity; therefore, the natural history of acute rupture is usually fatal during the first 24 h after injury if left untreated. Prompt and simple diagnosis is, hence, of paramount importance for successful treatment of acute aortic rupture. ⋯ We report on a 47-year-old woman with severe blunt thoraco-abdominal trauma resulting from a car accident; at hospital admission abdominal injuries were predominant and diagnosis of an acute rupture of the descending thoracic aorta was made only about 18 h after admission using biplane transesophageal echocardiography. Emergency surgical revision confirmed the diagnosis of complete transsection of the descending thoracic aorta immediately after the origin of the left subclavian artery; the site of transsection was surrounded by a large hematoma. Despite successful reconstruction of the descending thoracic aorta by means of graft interposition, a recurrent local bleeding event lead to complete circulatory destabilization and, finally, to the death of the patient.