Annals of vascular surgery | 2021

Open surgical treatment of acute spontaneous isolated abdominal aortic dissection.

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Abstract


INTRODUCTION\nThe aim of this paper is to report our single-center experience in the open surgical treatment of acute spontaneous infrarenal isolated abdominal aortic dissection (siIAAD).\n\n\nMETHODS AND PATIENTS\nThis was a single center retrospective study. Between January 2015 and 2020 ten patients were treated due to acute siIAAD with open surgery. There were no patients treated for chronic siIAAD in this time period. Patients who had concomitant thoracic aortic involvement were excluded from this report.\n\n\nRESULTS\nThe group consisted of 7 male and 3 female patients. History of hypertension was present in nine patients and six were active smokers. The abdominal/back pain was described in 9 patients, two had acute limb ischemia and three had aortic rupture. Median dissection length was 91mm (65.7-106), median distance from the lowest renal artery was 30mm (20.7-49.3) and median abdominal aortic diameter was 58.5mm (32.5-66.2). Supracoeliac clamp was used in three cases with a ruptured aorta and suprarenal in two patients. The mean duration of proximal clamping time was 24.3±7.49min. One patient died of postoperative acute myocardial infarction, one suffered nonfatal pulmonary embolism and one had deep venous thrombosis. No aortic-related deaths/reinterventions occurred during the median follow-up of 32 months.\n\n\nCONCLUSION\nAcute siIAAD is a rare event which affects mostly male smokers with hypertension. Open surgery is a technically demanding procedure with acceptable complication rates and should be performed in specialized high-volume centers for the treatment of aortic disease. Future efforts to establish a multicenter registry to evaluate the prevalence of the disease and treatment options could\xa0provide better and more comprehensive guidelines for the treatment of acute siIAAAD.

Volume None
Pages None
DOI 10.1016/j.avsg.2021.02.035
Language English
Journal Annals of vascular surgery

Full Text