1. Extraperitoneal approach for repair of inflammatory abdominal aortic aneurysm
- Author
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Fiorani, Paolo, Faraglia, Vittorio, Speziale, Francesco, Lauri, Domenico, Massucci, Marco, and De Santis, Francesco
- Subjects
Aortic aneurysms ,Abdominal aneurysm ,Health - Abstract
An abdominal aortic aneurysm (AAA) is a dangerous condition characterized by an abnormal dilation of the abdominal aorta (a major artery), usually reflecting a structural weakness in the wall of the vessel. Rupture of the AAA can be fatal due to massive hemorrhage. Inflammatory aneurysms of the abdominal aorta (IAAA) are characterized by inflammation and extensive fibrous (scar-like) tissue growth causing adhesion to surrounding organs, making surgical isolation of the aneurysm extremely difficult. In cases where the standard operative approach (through the abdomen) has been used in treating IAAAs, the incidence of damage to adjacent organs ranged between 5 and 15 percent of the cases. A new and highly successful approach, accessing the aneurysm from the back (extraperitoneal approach), is much less risky than the standard approach. In a series of 45 patients treated for IAAA over the past 12 years, the results for patients operated on by the standard abdominal approach have been much bleaker than when the extraperitoneal approach has been used. Of 41 patients undergoing standard approach treatments, over 15 percent suffered significant complications during and after surgery, including heart attack, kidney failure, and loss of blood supply to the gastrointestinal tract. Three patients had died within 30 days of surgery (7.7 percent mortality). In four patients treated with the extraperitoneal method, there were no significant complications and no deaths. Computerized tomographic (CT) visualization of IAAA in 12 patients revealed that there was significantly more fibrosis (scar tissue formation) on the anterior wall of the aneurysm (the route of the abdominal approach) than the left posterolateral wall (route of the extraperitoneal approach). (Consumer Summary produced by Reliance Medical Information, Inc.)
- Published
- 1991