Sabiston and Spencer Surgery of the Chest

Type B Aortic Dissection

Occurring more frequently than ruptured abdominal aortic aneurysm, aortic dissection is the most common catastrophe involving the aorta. Because major aortic branch occlusion can complicate the clinical presentation of patients with acute dissection and thus mimic many other acute medical…

Type A Aortic Dissection

Acute aortic dissection is one of the most common catastrophes involving the aorta. Dissection of the aorta is characterized by the separation of the aortic media by pulsatile blood, with variable extents of proximal and distal extension along the aorta…

Surgery of the Aortic Arch

The history of cardioaortic surgery has been replete with new techniques for ascending and aortic arch repairs since 1956, when Denton Cooley and Michael DeBakey replaced the ascending aorta with a homograft using cardiac bypass. In 1957, DeBakey and colleagues…

Myocardial Protection

Despite meticulous adherence to presently known principles of myocardial protection, perioperative myocardial damage related to ischemia-reperfusion injury continues to occur after cardiac operations that have been performed in a technically adequate manner. Ischemia-reperfusion injury associated with surgically induced myocardial ischemia…