# Intraoperative Iatrogenic Aortic Dissection in Cardiovascular Surgery: Case Series and Literature Review

**Authors:** Jinjing Wu, Tiantian Sun, Peirong Lin, Sheng Wang

PMC · DOI: 10.3390/jcdd13010005 · 2025-12-21

## TL;DR

This paper reports on a rare but serious complication during heart surgery called intraoperative iatrogenic aortic dissection, based on 31 cases and a review of existing literature.

## Contribution

The study provides a detailed case series and comparison with published data, highlighting outcomes and risk factors for this rare surgical complication.

## Key findings

- IAD was identified intraoperatively in 90.3% of patients, with most involving the ascending aorta.
- Overall mortality in the study cohort was 38.7%, higher than the pooled mortality of 32.8% from other studies.
- Common complications included low cardiac output syndrome, neurological injury, and acute kidney injury.

## Abstract

Background: Intraoperative iatrogenic aortic dissection (IAD) is an uncommon but serious complication of cardiac surgery, and available evidence remains limited, with most reports based on small series. This study summarizes our experience in a high-volume cardiovascular center and compares the findings with published data. Methods: We retrospectively reviewed 31 consecutive IAD cases treated at Anzhen Hospital from 2020 to 2024, assessing patient characteristics, operative details, and postoperative outcomes. Results: IAD was identified intraoperatively in 90.3% of patients, with ascending aortic involvement in 80.6%. The main procedures included ascending aorta replacement (45.2%) and hemiarch replacement (22.6%). Mean cardiopulmonary bypass time was 342.6 ± 133.8 min, and 38.7% required circulatory arrest. Major postoperative complications were low cardiac output syndrome (61.3%), neurological injury (25.8%), and acute kidney injury (45.2%). Overall mortality was 38.7%. Review of 17 original studies (1998–2025; >2000 patients) showed a pooled mortality of 32.8%. Patients in our cohort had higher operative risk and more complex procedures, which may partly explain the higher complication and mortality rates. Conclusions: IAD remains a major intraoperative challenge. Prompt recognition and individualized surgical strategies are essential. These findings provide further insight into intraoperative iatrogenic dissection and may help inform operative and perioperative decision-making.

## Linked entities

- **Diseases:** acute kidney injury (MONDO:0002492)

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** low cardiac output syndrome (MESH:D002303), acute kidney injury (MESH:D058186), Aortic Dissection (MESH:D000784), neurological injury (MESH:D020196)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12841637