We herein report a clinical case concerning successful staged (laparoscopic and endovascular) treatment of an elderly patient with tandem celiac trunk stenosis due to extravasal compression (Dunbar syndrome) and atherosclerotic lesion. A 65-year-old male patient was admitted to the Angiosurgical Department in July 2019 with complaints of episodes of loss of consciousness occurring after meals, lasting up to a minute and followed by a spontaneous complete recovery. On examination (ultrasound duplex scanning of the iliac trunk, MSCT angiography of the thoracic and abdominal aorta), he was diagnosed as having a hemodynamically significant stenosis (up to 80%) of the ostial segment of the celiac trunk caused by compression of the median arcuate ligament of the diaphragm, as well as an atherosclerotic lesion of the ostium of the celiac trunk (up to 70%). A decision was made to perform two-stage surgical treatment – laparoscopic decompression of the celiac trunk by dissection of the arcuate ligament, followed by delayed stenting of the celiac trunk in the area of the atherosclerotic lesion, with a positive clinical effect obtained in the form of complete relief of symptoms. Four years later, the patient’s control examination revealed asymptomatic in-stent restenosis (up to 60%) managed by endovascular angioplasty with a drug-coated balloon catheter. In the presented clinical case, staged minimally invasive treatment (laparoscopic and endovascular) made it possible to avoid traumatic surgical procedures (laparotomy, direct dissection of the arcuate ligament of the diaphragm, and direct endarterectomy of the celiac trunk with patch plasty), hence decreasing the risks of intra-and postoperative complications and contributing to the reduction of rehabilitation time and rapid return of the patient to his usual way of life. © 2023, Geotar Media Publishing Group. All rights reserved.