Background: Aortic connector devices (ACDs) for proximal anastomoses of vein grafts during coronary artery bypass grafting (CABG) have widely failed during recent years. As a consequence ACDs have been withdrawn from the market.
Method: We report on an 81-year-old patient who had undergone CABG for three-vessel disease. The proximal anastomosis was accomplished with an ACD (St Jude Medical) due to a highly calcified ascending aorta. Six years later the patient underwent aortic valve replacement, which offered the opportunity of visual inspection of the previous ACD anastomosis.
Result: Coronary angiography demonstrated a perfectly patent ACD anastomosis with a sufficient sequential vein graft to the marginal and the postero-lateral branches. Intraoperatively, the nitinol stent of the ACD anastomosis was perfectly incorporated, and covered with a thin layer of endothelial cells.
Discussion: Though poor, short- and mid-term results have led to the abandonment of ACDs, our case demonstrates a perfect anastomosis after a six-year follow-up.