A late redissection case of the aortic root after total arch replacement for acute Stanford type A aortic dissection was reported. A 55-year-old male was treated with total arch replacement for acute Stanford type A aortic dissection. The aortic valve was bicuspid valve, and the right coronary leaflet was prolapsed because of the dissection of right and non coronary cusp. Resuspension of the commissure and the fixation of the dissected aortic wall with gelatin-resorcin-formalin (GRF) glue was performed during the operation. The initial postoperative course was uneventful and the patient discharged 52 days after the operation. Redissection of aortic root was pointed out on the computed tomography (CT) 3.5 years after the operation. As the second operation, the aortic root replacement was performed. Coronary artery bypass for right coronary artery was simultaneously performed with right internal thoracic artery because the right coronary ostium was stenotic and showed ischemic change on electrocardiogram monitor during the operation. The redissection was seen on the right coronary sinus, which was fixed by the GRF glue during the first operation. The pathological study showed the migration of macrophages and the tear of the fibrous tissue. These findings was thought to be associated with the use of the GRF glue. Careful use of the GRF glue for the fixation of the dissected aorta during the surgical treatment for the Stanford type A aortic dissection was thought to be important.