Author/year | Patient age (years) | Diagnosis | Follow–up time (months) | Result |
---|---|---|---|---|
Bolia et al. 1990 | 47–86 | Occlusions of the femoro-popliteal segment | 6 | 37 (84%) were either asymptomatic or improved |
Watkinson et al. 2009 [9] | 65 | Common iliac occlusion | 6 | Asymptomatic and a normal right femoral pulse |
Sebastian et al. 2011 | 60 | Acute thoracico–abdominal type B dissection | – | No ischemic symptoms of the right leg |
69 | Acute thoracico–abdominal type B dissection | – | No symptoms | |
70 | Iatrogenic type A dissection | – | Death | |
60 | Chronic thoracico–abdominal type B dissection | – | No symptoms | |
Jun Tashiro et al. 2013 [2] | 70 | Abdominal aortic aneurysm and chronic type B aortic dissection | 3 | No symptoms |
Brant et al. 2015 | 57 | Chronic residual chronic residual | 8 | No symptoms |
Hozan et al. 2018 | 53 | Complicated type A dissection | – | Death |
Jordan et al. 2018 | 65 | Acute aortic type A dissection | 1 | No symptoms and no endoleak |
Iwakoshi et al. 2019 | 47 | Loeys–Dietz syndrome, aortic arch aneurysm, and chronic Stanford type B aortic dissection | 24 | Type Ib endoleak and abdominal aorta repair was performed |
75 | Proximal descending thoracic aorta and true lumen collapse | 24 | Type III endoleak and TEVAR was performed | |
49 | Type A aortic dissection | 16 | A stable descending aortic aneurysm with no endoleak | |
Current | 62 | Abdominal aortic type B dissection | 6 | No symptoms |