A 50-year-old woman presented with fever, cough, shortness of breath, and left-sided chest pain. Computed tomography with contrast showed a pseudoaneurysm occupying the upper half of the left hemithorax. Surgical repair with a Dacron patch was performed after considering the risk of pseudoaneurysmal rupture.
HiraiSHamanakaYMitsuiNMorifujiKUegamiS. Spontaneous rupture of the ascending thoracic aorta resulting in a mimicking pseudoaneurysm. Ann Thorac Cardiovasc Surg2006; 12: 223–237.
2.
RazzoukAGundrySWangNHeynerRSciolaroCVan ArsdellG. Pseudoaneurysms of the aorta after cardiac surgery or chest trauma. Am Surg1993; 59: 818–823.
AlmeidaRPinhoTOliveiraNPAlmeidaJMacedoFSousaAR. A case of acute heart failure due to giant aortic pseudoaneurysm with fistulization to the right ventricle after a modified Bentall operation. Eur J Echocardiogr2008; 9: 716–719.
5.
NelJDKrieglerSGVan VuurenWMHarrisDGBolligerCT. An unusual cause of nearly fatal hemoptysis. Respiration2001; 68: 635–636.
6.
StaatzGBuckerA. Spontaneous nontraumatic rupture of the descending thoracic aorta with development of a giant pseudoaneurysm [Review]. J Vasc Interv Radiol2001; 12: 394–395.
7.
KutayVHarmanMEkimHYakutC. Chronic pseudoaneurysm of the aortic arch: a case report. J Card Surg2005; 20: 542–544.
8.
KandpalHSeithA. Rapidly enlarging mediastinal mass in a middle-aged patient with fever. Br J Radiol2008; 81: 357–359.