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Query: UMLS:C0162871 (
abdominal aortic aneurysm
)
8,664
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Among the indications for renal artery revascularization, either surgical or endovascular, in patients with renal artery stenosis are poorly controlled hypertension, ischemic nephropathy (preservation of renal function), or recurrent episodes of "flash" pulmonary edema and congestive heart failure. Pharmacologic treatment is the first-line therapy to control blood pressure. If the disease is unilateral, the blood pressure regimen should include an angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitor. Guidelines published in the Sixth Report of the Joint National Committee on the Prevention, Detection, Evaluation, and Treatment of high blood pressure should be followed. Revascularization is recommended if patients have at least 75% stenosis of one or both renal arteries, combined with resistant or poorly controlled hypertension; recurrent flash pulmonary edema; dialysis-dependent
renal failure
resulting from renal artery stenosis; chronic renal insufficiency and bilateral renal artery stenosis; or renal artery stenosis to a solitary functioning kidney. To treat fibromuscular disease of the renal arteries, percutaneous transluminal angioplasty is the revascularization procedure of choice. Ex vivo surgical repair of the renal artery may be required if there is significant branch renal artery stenosis. To treat atherosclerotic renal artery stenosis, the revascularization procedure of choice is percutaneous transluminal angioplasty and stent implantation, especially if there is concomitant ostial or proximal renal artery disease. Surgical revascularization is performed if concomitant aortic surgery is required, such as for
abdominal aortic aneurysm
.
...
PMID:Renal Artery Stenosis. 1109 69
When performing high-risk
abdominal aortic aneurysm
(
AAA
), aortic cross-clamp time was reduced to a mean of 9 minutes by performing retrograde anastomosis using a ringed Y-graft (RYG). Retrograde anastomosis with RYG was performed in nine patients, (eight men and one woman) with a mean age of 74 years (range: 65-82 years). Three patients had angina pectoris and chronic renal failure, two had angina pectoris, one had thoracoabdominal aortic aneurysm and chronic renal failure, one had
renal failure
, one had aortic regurgitation, and one had aortic stenosis. First, the right common, external, and internal iliac arteries were clamped, then, the right limb of the graft was anastomosed to the common iliac artery or external iliac artery. Next, the aorta and left common iliac artery were clamped, and a longitudinal incision was made in the aneurysm. The proximal end of the RYG was inserted into the aorta and blood flow was resumed. Finally, the left limb of the graft was anastomosed to the left common iliac artery or external iliac artery. The mean aortic cross-clamp time was 9 minutes (range: 8-18 minutes). There were no cardiac complications during surgery. The mean operating time was 3:34 hours (range: 3:05-4:35 hours), and the blood loss averaged 1156 ml (range: 200-2000 ml). None of the patients developed postoperative complications and all of them have remained well after discharge. Retrograde anastomosis using RYG is one type of surgery that could be used in cases of high-risk patients with
AAA
. </hea
...
PMID:Abdominal Aortic Aneurysm Surgery in Patients with Cardiac and Renal Complications: Retrograde Anastomosis Using a Ringed Y-graft. 1117 81
In this report, based on a 5 year experience, 76 operation were performed electively for intact
abdominal aortic aneurysm
and 55 were emergency procedure for ruptured aneurysm. Factor affecting mortality and morbidity in the cases are analysed. Three patients died of cardiac causes following elective aneurysm repair, a mortality rate of 3.9%. No patients died of pulmonary causes,
renal failure
or required dialysis. No patient developed a graft infection, stroke or intestinal ischemia. Mortality rates for surgical repair of ruptured
AAA
averaged 32% and the principal cause of death is cardiac disease (50%). The second cause is
renal failure
. Declining of operative mortality for intact aortic aneurysm is related to earlier diagnosis using non invasive methods and correct preoperative study.
...
PMID:[Surgical treatment of abdominal aortic aneurysm. Factors affecting mortality and morbidity]. 1144 42
From February 1998 and March 2000 fourteen patients underwent "custom made" aortic self-expanding endoprostheses implantation (World Medical Talent Sunrise): nine of them for dilative pathology of thoracic aorta and 5 for
abdominal aortic aneurysm
below renal arteries. The etiology was degenerative in 8 patients, false aneurysm in 2, chronic dissection in 2 cases, acute dissection in one patient and post traumatic in the last one. All patients underwent preoperative Computed Tomography and Substraction Angiography studies. Stent-graft implantation was successful in all cases but one who required the conversion of the endovascular procedure in traditional surgery for technical problems. There were no perioperative deaths or major complications. We registered 2 cases of dissection of the femoral artery used to introduce the stent-graft, and treated with an iliac-femoral prosthetic bypass. There were no cases of paraplegia or
renal failure
or bowel ischemia. With the exception of one patient, died for a car accident, the others are alive and continue their scheduled follow-up controls. Our experience shows that this procedure is safe, allowing favorable results, if compared to traditional surgery, even if it requires further long-term evaluations.
...
PMID:[Endoluminal repair of aortic aneurysms. Our experience]. 1145 Jan 17
A full-term baby girl who was sent home day of life 2 was admitted to the hospital on day of life 7 for respiratory distress and poor feeding. The child was found to be hypertensive and in heart failure. Further workup led to the diagnosis of a suprarenal
abdominal aortic aneurysm
, but the infant had deteriorated clinically with heart failure, modest
renal failure
, renovascular hypertension, and no operative cure. The child died on day of life 20. Early diagnosis and prompt surgical resection are essential to managing this rare and lethal condition.
...
PMID:Congenital abdominal aortic aneurysm causing renovascular hypertension, cardiomyopathy, and death in a 19-day-old neonate. 1152 24
Vascular imaging, usually employing nephrotoxic contrast agents is relied upon for all aspects of endovascular
AAA
repair causing some to consider renal insufficiency a relative contraindication. We sought to determine if endovascular
AAA
evaluation and repair could be successfully accomplished by minimally or non-nephrotoxic modalities. Records and results for 98 consecutive patients undergoing endovascular
AAA
repair were reviewed. Patients requiring dialysis preoperatively were excluded (N=3). The average volume of iodinated contrast agent employed for intraoperative imaging was 152 cc (35-420 cc). Twenty patients (20%) had baseline renal insufficiency (serum creatinine > or =1.3 mg/dl). A rise in serum creatinine above baseline was observed in 23 (24%) patients following repair; for 15 (16%) this was permanent. Creatinine rise occurred in patients with both normal (15) and abnormal (8) baseline values (P=0.09). Rise in creatinine was independent of contrast volume employed and of the use of infrarenal vs suprarenal device fixation (P>0.05). Two (2%) patients required permanent dialysis, one of which had a normal baseline creatinine and unclear etiology for
renal failure
, the other had a baseline creatinine of 2 and required device placement over an accessory renal artery. Strategies to minimize the use of nephrotoxic contrast for patients with renal insufficiency included the use of MRA, rather than contrast-CT for pre and postoperative imaging (7, 35%) and use of Gadolinium rather than iodinated contrast for performance of intraoperative arteriography (5, 25%). Endovascular grafts were successfully designed and implanted based upon MRA as the sole preoperative imaging modality in every case in which it was attempted (7). Mortality was not significantly different between those with and without abnormal baseline renal function (P>0.05). Adverse events (access failures, arterial injuries, blood loss, endoleaks) were not significantly correlated with baseline renal insufficiency, rise in creatinine from baseline, use of MRA or intraoperative Gadolinium angiography (P>0.05).Pre- and postoperative evaluation and performance of endovascular
AAA
repair can be accomplished in patients with renal insufficiency without increasing the rate of mortality or adverse events employing a strategy which minimizes the use of nephrotoxic contrast agents, relying upon Gadolinium arteriography and MRA. Endovascular grafts can be successfully planned and followed employing MRA as the sole imaging modality.
...
PMID:Endovascular AAA repair in patients with renal insufficiency: strategies for reducing adverse renal events. 1160 38
The objective of this report was to analyze the current surgical results of operative treatment in patients suffering ruptured
AAA
(abdominal aortic aneurysms) and to define those independent predictive factors for mortality. During a period of 2 years, from January 1996 to December 1997, 144 patients operated on for ruptured
AAA
in 10 hospitals were included in a multicenter retrospective study. Among the collected variables concerning each patient, those with potential relation to surgical mortality were studied: gender, age, diabetes, hypertension, cardiopathy, pulmonary obstructive disease, preoperative renal dysfunction, symptomatic cerebrovascular disease, peripheral vascular disease, hematocrit on admission, preoperative hypotension < 80 mmHg, loss of consciousness, cardiac arrest, aortic aneurysm location (infrarenal versus non-infrarenal), iliac involvement, aneurysm size, type of rupture, left renal vein ligature, ligature of a patent inferior mesenteric artery, place of aortic cross-clamping, type of grafting, exclusion of both hypogastric arteries, venous technical complications, associated surgery, use of cell saver, intraoperative blood loss, and postoperative complications (
renal failure
, sepsis, coagulopathy, cardiac complications, pulmonary complications, colon ischemia, prosthetic graft complications, and need for reoperation). Those variables with statistical significance in the univariate analysis were introduced into a multivariate logistic regression model to determine the independent predictors of death. From our results we concluded that surgery for ruptured abdominal aortic aneurysms continues to have an excessively high mortality rate. Even though some preoperative variables could be identified as predictors of mortality, an absolute mortality risk has not yet been determined and the decision to negate surgery should be individualized rather than taken on that basis only. Early diagnosis and treatment of symptomatic aneurysms would improve mortality figures and selective screening should be contemplated.
...
PMID:Factors increasing the mortality rate for patients with ruptured abdominal aortic aneurysms. 1176 39
We describe a case of acute cardiovascular collapse in a patient with end-stage
renal failure
undergoing endoluminal repair of an
abdominal aortic aneurysm
. The 61-yr-old man suffered cardiac arrest shortly after administration of radiocontrast medium (Omnipaque), during deployment of the endovascular device. He had received the same contrast solution for diagnostic angiography on the previous day. He was successfully resuscitated and recovered completely. The differential diagnosis and management are discussed.
...
PMID:Cardiac arrest after administration of Omnipaque radiocontrast medium during endoluminal repair of abdominal aortic aneurysm. 1217 16
During 1993 to 2000 85 patients were treated for a ruptured
abdominal aortic aneurysm
. The average age of the patients was 72.4 years (46-90). 71 patients showed an infrarenal rupture and the remaining 14 a suprenal rupture. 76 of 85 cases were covered ruptures. All patients were operated upon. A tube graft was required in 43 cases and 31 needed a bifurcated graft. In further two cases an extraanatomical bypass was necessary due to a mycotic aneurysm. The operation on 11 patients could not be completed and 21 patients died in hospital during the postoperative period. On the other hand, 53 patients survived the rupture of the aneurysm. The mortality rate was 37.6 %. The early non-surgical complications dominated during the postoperative period. Respiratory failure,
renal failure
and cardiac failure were responsible for the mortality rate. It is unforseeable which patients will survive the emergency operation. Therefore it is always appropriate to attempt the reconstruction of an acutely ruptured
AAA
.
...
PMID:[Results and complications of ruptured abdominal aortic aneurysm repair]. 1220 Jul 27
Studies have investigated the role of hospital and surgeon case volume in outcome after ruptured
abdominal aortic aneurysm
repair (rAAA). Few have analyzed the learning curve of an individual surgeon. The purpose of this study was to analyze this learning curve in reducing morbidity and mortality after rAAA repair. Thirty-two consecutive patients who underwent rAAA repair during the initial 2.5 years of a vascular surgeon's career were reviewed retrospectively. They were divided temporally into two groups of 16 patients (groups 1 and 2). Outcome measures included mortality, postoperative myocardial infarction, stroke, and renal and respiratory failure. Perioperative variables previously associated with increased mortality were analyzed. The cumulative sum (CUSUM) method was used to analyze the learning curve with respect to published acceptable event rates and predetermined 80% alert and 95% alarm boundary lines. Groups 1 and 2 did not differ statistically in age, preoperative blood pressure, hemoglobin or creatinine. There was no difference in transfusion requirements (6.8 +/- 1.2 units vs. 6.4 +/- 1.0 units; p = 0.78), urine output (340 +/- 65 mL vs. 389 +/- 94 mL; p = 0.72) or clamp position. There was no difference in the incidence of postoperative myocardial infarction, stroke, or respiratory or
renal failure
. Thirty-day mortality in group 2 was 12% as compared to 50% in Group 1 (p = 0.03). On CUSUM analysis, the cumulative failure rate in group 2 progressed lower than the 80% reassurance line, indicating improved results with time. Mortality after rAAA repair decreased over time during an early period of an individual surgeon's career. The CUSUM method is a valuable tool in analyzing an individual surgeon's experience and shows promise in quality control in vascular surgery.
...
PMID:A CUSUM analysis of ruptured abdominal aortic aneurysm repair. 1220 3
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