Cardiac Findings at Necropsy in Acute Type A Aortic Dissection

Am J Cardiol. 2022 May 1:170:155-159. doi: 10.1016/j.amjcard.2021.11.007.

Abstract

Described herein are necropsy findings in 97 patients aged 22 to 82 years (mean 55), 37 women, 60 men, studied at necropsy with acute aortic dissection (AD) with the intimal-medial tear in the ascending aorta. The cases were studied from 1966 to 1989, a period when echocardiography and computed tomography were relatively infrequently available for diagnosis of AD. Arteriography was the method for diagnosis in most cases. Of the 97 cases, 30(31%) had operative intervention and 67 did not. Most appeared to have had systemic hypertension before the acute AD; only 4 had previous heart failure; only 8 had considerable atherosclerotic coronary disease; only 4 had a left ventricular (LV) scar and in each it was small; most (96%) had a normal-sized LV cavity (suggesting normal cardiac indices in them), and the other 4 had only a mildly dilated cavity; the heart weight in all 97 patients was increased; the quantity of subepicardial adipose tissue was increased in most patients, and the frequency of a congenitally malformed aortic valve was much higher than in the general population (6% - vs- 1%), but still uncommon. Thus, in > 90% of patients with acute Type A AD, coronary atherosclerosis was insignificant, myocardial fibrosis is absent, and the aortic valve has 3 cusps without stenosis.

Publication types

  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

MeSH terms

  • Aorta
  • Aortic Dissection* / diagnosis
  • Aortic Dissection* / surgery
  • Aortic Valve / surgery
  • Autopsy
  • Coronary Artery Disease*
  • Female
  • Humans
  • Hypertension*
  • Male