How I Do It: Aortic Arch Debranching Exposures, Tunnels ...€¦ · Rutherford Atlas of Vascular Surgery 1993 Prosthetic graft • 6 or 8mm PTFE or Dacron Sew the graft end-to-side

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  • [ADD PRESENTATION TITLE: INSERT TAB > HEADER & FOOTER > NOTES AND HANDOUTS]

    4/14/20161

    How I Do It: Aortic Arch DebranchingExposures, Tunnels and Techniques

    4/14/2016

    Warren Gasper MDAssistant Professor of SurgeryUCSF Vascular Surgery

    No disclosures

    2 Aortic Arch Debranching | UCSF Vascular Symposium 2016 4/14/16

    Into the arch

    � Zone 2

    • Occlude the left subclavian artery

    � Zone 1

    • Occlude the left carotid and left subclavian arteries

    � Zone 0

    • Occlude the innominate, left carotid and left subclavian arteries

    3 Aortic Arch Debranching | UCSF Vascular Symposium 2016 4/14/16

    J Endovasc Ther 2002;9:suppl 2; II98–105

    Zone 2 – preserve the left subclavian

    � Left carotid to left subclavian bypass

    • Short, prosthetic bypass from common carotid to subclavian

    • Need to ligate/occlude the subclavian proximal to the vertebral

    • Preferred if there is LIMA-coronary bypass, no need to interrupt LIMA flow

    � Left subclavian to carotid transposition

    • No bypass conduit, proximal subclavian artery is oversewn

    • Can be difficult to get proximal to the vertebral and internal mammary

    Assess the origin of the vertebral artery to ensure it is preserved

    Preoperative carotid duplex – treat occlusive disease concomitantly

    4 Aortic Arch Debranching | UCSF Vascular Symposium 2016 4/14/16

  • [ADD PRESENTATION TITLE: INSERT TAB > HEADER & FOOTER > NOTES AND HANDOUTS]

    4/14/20162

    Carotid-subclavian bypass

    5 Aortic Arch Debranching | UCSF Vascular Symposium 2016 4/14/16

    � Supraclavicular incision

    � Divide the platysma

    � Divide the clavicular head of the SCM if needed

    � Divide the omohyoid

    Rutherford Atlas of Vascular Surgery 1993

    Carotid-subclavian bypass

    6 Aortic Arch Debranching | UCSF Vascular Symposium 2016 4/14/16

    � Supraclavicular incision

    � Divide the platysma

    � Divide the clavicular head of the SCM if needed

    � Divide the omohyoid

    � Ligate the external jugular if needed

    Valentine Vascular Exposures 2003

    � Mobilize the inferior and medial edges of the scalene fat pad and retract superolateral

    � Divide the thoracic duct if needed

    � Identify the phrenic nerve running anterior to the anterior scalene muscle

    7 Aortic Arch Debranching | UCSF Vascular Symposium 2016 4/14/16

    Carotid-subclavian bypass

    Valentine Vascular Exposures 2003

    � Mobilize the inferior and medial edges of the scalene fat pad and retract superolateral

    � Divide the thoracic duct if needed

    � Identify the phrenic nerve

    � Divide the anterior scalene (bovie, bipolar, scissors)

    8 Aortic Arch Debranching | UCSF Vascular Symposium 2016 4/14/16

    Carotid-subclavian bypass

    Rutherford Atlas of Vascular Surgery 1993

  • [ADD PRESENTATION TITLE: INSERT TAB > HEADER & FOOTER > NOTES AND HANDOUTS]

    4/14/20163

    � Proximal and distal control of the subclavian artery

    9 Aortic Arch Debranching | UCSF Vascular Symposium 2016 4/14/16

    Carotid-subclavian bypass

    Rutherford Atlas of Vascular Surgery 1993

    � Divide the SCM or retract it medially

    � Expose the lateral edge of the internal jugular and retract medially

    � Expose the left common carotid artery while protecting the vagus nerve

    10 Aortic Arch Debranching | UCSF Vascular Symposium 2016 4/14/16

    Carotid-subclavian bypass

    Rutherford Atlas of Vascular Surgery 1993

    � Prosthetic graft

    • 6 or 8mm PTFE or Dacron

    � Sew the graft end-to-side to the subclavian artery first

    11 Aortic Arch Debranching | UCSF Vascular Symposium 2016 4/14/16

    Carotid-subclavian bypass

    Ouriel Atlas of Vascular Surgery 1998

    � Pass above or below the phrenic nerve

    � Pass below the internal jugular vein

    � Use 5mm aortic punch (optional) and sew end-to-side

    � Ligate the subclavianproximal to vertebral or use an endovascular plug

    � Close the platysma and skin over a JP drain

    12 Aortic Arch Debranching | UCSF Vascular Symposium 2016 4/14/16

    Carotid-subclavian bypass

    Ouriel Atlas of Vascular Surgery 1998

  • [ADD PRESENTATION TITLE: INSERT TAB > HEADER & FOOTER > NOTES AND HANDOUTS]

    4/14/20164

    Zone 1: Preserve the left carotid and left subclavian arteries

    Right carotid – left carotid – left subclavian bypass

    = 4 anastomoses

    Alternative: Right carotid – left subclavian – right carotid bypass

    = 3 anastomoses

    13 Aortic Arch Debranching | UCSF Vascular Symposium 2016 4/14/16

    Perspect Vasc Surg Endovas Ther 2012;24(4) 184–192

    Carotid-carotid-subclavian bypass tips� Expose right common carotid with a longitudinal incision and the left common

    carotid and subclavian through a supraclavicular incision

    � Be aware of the vagus nerves

    • In an unlucky situation, injury to both nerves can cause bilateral vocal cord paralysis and airway compromise

    � Bypass technique:

    • 6 or 8mm PTFE or Dacron

    • Right common carotid – Left subclavian – Left common carotid

    � Tunnel choices

    � Ligate/occlude the proximal left subclavian and left common carotid arteries

    14 Aortic Arch Debranching | UCSF Vascular Symposium 2016 4/14/16

    15 Aortic Arch Debranching | UCSF Vascular Symposium 2016 4/14/16

    Tunnels

    Retropharyngeal

    Anterior

    Valentine Vascular Exposures 2003

    Rarely used option: subclavian-subclavian bypass

    16 Aortic Arch Debranching | UCSF Vascular Symposium 2016 4/14/16

    Ouriel Atlas of Vascular Surgery 1998

  • [ADD PRESENTATION TITLE: INSERT TAB > HEADER & FOOTER > NOTES AND HANDOUTS]

    4/14/20165

    Rarely used option: subclavian-subclavian bypass

    17 Aortic Arch Debranching | UCSF Vascular Symposium 2016 4/14/16

    Ouriel Atlas of Vascular Surgery 1998

    Rarely used option #2: axillo-axillary bypass

    18 Aortic Arch Debranching | UCSF Vascular Symposium 2016 4/14/16

    Ouriel Atlas of Vascular Surgery 1998

    Rarely used option #2: axillo-axillary bypass

    19 Aortic Arch Debranching | UCSF Vascular Symposium 2016 4/14/16

    Ouriel Atlas of Vascular Surgery 1998

    Conclusions

    � Debranching procedures have high success and long-term patency rates

    �Watch for anatomic variations and carotid artery disease

    � Right carotid-left subclavian-left carotid bypass will save an anastomosis

    20 Aortic Arch Debranching | UCSF Vascular Symposium 2016 4/14/16

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