IMETTYB   25748
INSTITUTO DE MEDICINA TRASLACIONAL, TRASPLANTE Y BIOINGENIERIA
Unidad Ejecutora - UE
artículos
Título:
Acute type B aortic dissection risk predictors: Thoracic aorta anatomic variables
Autor/es:
CRAIEM D
Revista:
INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF CARDIOLOGY
Editorial:
ELSEVIER IRELAND LTD
Referencias:
Lugar: Amsterdam; Año: 2017 vol. 239
ISSN:
0167-5273
Resumen:
We believe that the vulnerability of the subjects to aortic diseases may be influenced by geometrical risk factors. Your valuable comments give us the chance to better explain this hypothesis.We have shown a thoracic aorta enlargement and unfolding process with ageing, that accelerates with hypertension. We share your concerns regarding the determination of reference values for the normal aortic size. After conducting a principal component analysis, we found 80% of the total geometric variability explained by changes in aortic size, arch unfolding and asymmetry. To investigate the association between aortic diseases and geometry, we assessed thoracic aorta calcium, showing that it was associated with aorticmorphology, particularly in the descending aorta. At that point, an important question arose: Are aortic diseases a consequence or the cause of these geometrical changes?. Similarly, is the aortic arch enlargement responsible for the dissection or the consequence of the acute event?. As Shirali et al., we excluded from the multivariate model all the descending aorta geometric variables. However, the abrupt reduction of the descending aorta lumen, forcing blood to flowthrough the true lumen, could raise blood pressure and induce an ascending aorta expansion. To further investigate this issue, we measured the diameter of the ascending aorta in patients from the dissection group after an endovascular aortic repair procedure (n = 24). No significant changes in the diameter of the ascending aorta were observed after the surgery, suggesting that the dilatation existed before the dissection onset.