In a 74-year-old patient who had undergone coronary artery bypass grafting 8 years earlier, angiography was performed for recent onset of angina pectoris. Surprisingly, angiography revealed chronic dissection of the ascending aortic vessel with occlusion of a saphenous vein graft and partial thrombosis of the false lumen. Additionally, there was significant progression of coronary artery disease with new stenoses in both the ostium and body of the saphenous vein graft to the right coronary artery and a high grade left main coronary artery stenosis. Because any surgical intervention was refused by the patient, an interventional therapeutic strategy with percutaneous transluminal dilatation and stenting of both the bypass graft and the left main coronary artery was planned and successfully performed. This is the first report of a complex intervention and revascularization procedure carried out in a patient with type A aortic dissection. Thus, selected cases of chronic type A dissection my be amenable to interventional coronary revascularization in acute coronary syndromes.