Middle-aged hypertensive patients alerted to chest pain

  A few days ago, the famous Cameroonian soccer player Wei Wei An. The sudden death of Fou on the field of play due to the rupture of a coarctation aneurysm reminds people of our outstanding volleyball player Zhu Gang and American female volleyball player Hyman, who also died suddenly due to this disease. In fact, as early as 1996, the First Affiliated Hospital of Henan University has carried out thoracic aortic coarctation aneurysm surgery. The hospital’s famous vascular surgery expert, Professor Zhang Shuanglin, reminded middle-aged men suffering from hypertension should be especially wary of entrapment aneurysms.  The main cause of thoracic aortic coarctation aneurysm is hypertension and the weakness of the middle membrane of the artery. In China, hypertension has accounted for about 10% of adults, and the proportion of hypertensive patients with thoracic aortic coarctation aneurysm is over 80%. Therefore, poorly controlled hypertension, unstable hypertension and younger hypertensive patients are more likely to develop this disease, thus also causing the trend of younger thoracic aortic coarctation aneurysms.  Immediate examination of severe chest pain Because of the relatively high incidence of thoracic aortic coarctation aneurysms without precursors, many patients die suddenly within three or two minutes of the onset of the disease, making it impossible to perform resuscitation. Therefore, we believe that middle-aged men with hypertension are at high risk of developing the disease and must pay attention to controlling their blood pressure. Meanwhile, if you have severe chest pain in daily life, you must go to the hospital for a comprehensive examination. At present, non-invasive examinations are available through CT, MRI and ultrasound, and the condition should be promptly diagnosed and treated once detected.  Unfortunately, thoracic aortic coarctation aneurysms are often misdiagnosed clinically, such as patients who have chest pain and do not take it seriously, giving the doctor a light description of the symptoms, not to mention the relevant tests, and are finally misdiagnosed as heart attack or angina, and when the onset of the disease is seen and treated, there is no way to return.  Minimally invasive isolation can eliminate the root The minimally invasive intracavitary isolation procedure is done by making a small 3 cm long incision at the root of the thigh. This procedure has been hailed as a revolution in the history of surgical treatment of thoracic aortic coarctation aneurysms.