Skip to main content

Table 1 “Cheese wire” literature review

From: Reverse “cheese wire” fenestration for abdominal aortic dissection repair: a case report and literature review

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