Research Article

[Retracted] Early Diagnosis and Treatment of Nine Patients with Severe Multiple Injuries Accompanied by Traumatic Aortic Dissection during Emergency Treatment

Figure 1

Aortic CTA (a) 12 days after injury suggests separation of the dissection to the entire thoracoabdominal aorta, true luminal stenosis and involvement of the left subclavian, mesenteric, and left common iliac arteries. Intraoperative aortogram. (a) An intimal rupture in the aorta located 1 cm distal to the subclavian artery. (c) Placement of a thoracic aortic covered stent (with left subclavian artery branch) under dual guide-wire guidance in the subclavian artery and aorta. (d) Complete opening of the stent. (e) Good patency of the subclavian artery with a closed endothelial rupture and no extravasation of contrast. (f) 100 days after aortic covered stenting suggests intermural haematoma resorption, no extravasation of contrast, and good visualisation of the subclavian artery. CTA: computed tomography angiography.
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