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Query: UMLS:C0162871 (
abdominal aortic aneurysm
)
8,664
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The combination of
abdominal aortic aneurysm
(
AAA
) and necrosis of the lumbar vertebral bodies is often the consequence of ischemia of the lumbar arteries and local compression from the aneurysm. A patient with necrosis of lumbar vertebral bodies 2 to 4 was admitted for abdominal aneurysm repair. CT scanning revealed almost complete destruction of the second and fourth lumbar vertebral bodies. In a combined operation an orthopedic and a vascular surgical team implanted two carbonic cages with autogenous splinter of the pelvic bone and an aortic vascular graft, using a retroperitoneal approach. Three months after the operation the 61-year-old man is entirely well and without any signs of
back pain
. He could be fully mobilized within 3 weeks postoperatively. This case study depicts the surgical techniques and discusses the advantages of the simultaneous operation and retroperitoneal exposure.
...
PMID:[Simultaneous retroperitoneal operation of juxtarenal abdominal aortic aneurysm and ischemic vertebral body necrosis]. 920 40
The prevalence of prolonged rupture of aortic aneurysm was estimated in a group of 65 patients operated for ruptured
abdominal aortic aneurysm
(
AAA
). Patients with chronically contained rupture
AAA
were hemodynamically stable. Contained rupture of an
AAA
should be considered in patients presenting unexplained
back pain
and when radiograms suggest the degenerative changes within spine.
...
PMID:[Prolonged abdominal aortic aneurysm rupture penetrating the lumbar spine]. 938 19
A 59-year-old man, who manifested lower
back pain
, was admitted with sepsis and disseminated intravascular coagulation (DIC). A computed tomographic scan showed a slight thickening of the abdominal aortic wall. A blood examination revealed pancytopenia. Myelodysplastic syndrome was diagnosed after bone marrow aspiration and a chromosome analysis. Sepsis due to a Staphylococcus aureus infection and DIC subsided after medical treatment; however, an aortobifemoral bypass was performed upon the detection of a localized rupture of a mycotic
abdominal aortic aneurysm
1 month later. The patient is still alive 2 years after operation despite the presence of a hematological disorder.
...
PMID:Mycotic abdominal aortic aneurysm associated with myelodysplastic syndrome (MDS): report of a case. 959 Jul 13
Aortic dissection with no entry or false lumen flow was recently identified as intramural hemorrhage of the aortic wall (IMH). Analysis of the literature revealed 209 cases of in vivo diagnosed IMH reflecting 17% of all dissections, whereas in postmortem studies this condition is found in 4-13%. Transesophageal echocardiography, computed tomography, magnetic resonance imaging and aortography (to rule out dissection) have been applied for diagnosing IMH in 57, 49, 43 and 38% of the cases, respectively. However, diagnostic accuracy of each modality is not available to date. In 34%, IMH involves the ascending aorta (type A). The average age of patients with IMH ranges between 55 and 65 years; 65% are males. In 12%, IMH was associated with
abdominal aortic aneurysm
. With 87%, arterial hypertension is the predominant risk factor for IMH irrespective of its location. As suggested by the term "mediastinal apoplexy" IMH may--similar to cerebral apoplexy--result from hypertensive rupture of the vasa vasorum in the aortic media. With 97%, the majority of patients present with acute chest or
back pain
similar to classic dissection. Mediastinal widening is found in 83%; signs of hemothorax/pleural effusion are present in 38%, acute aortic regurgitation in 26%, pericardial effusion in 23%, acute neurologic deficits in 12%, and pulse deficits in 5%. In 18%, IMH progresses to dissection and in another 15% to rupture. In 25% and 28%, respectively, dissection and rupture occur in the ascending aorta and in 12% and 9%, respectively, in the descending thoracic aorta. The 30-day mortality of IMH is 24% (36% with type A and 12% with type B IMH; p < 0.05). With surgical repair, mortality of type A IMH is lowered to 18% compared to 60% with medical treatment (p < 0.01). In contrast, with 8% mortality associated with medical treatment, prognosis of type B IMH is more favorable without surgical intervention, the latter associated with a 30-day mortality of 33% (p < 0.05). Thus, IMH is a potential precursor of dissection and should be managed like dissection with undelayed surgical intervention in patients with type A IMH and with medical treatment in type B IMH.
...
PMID:[Intramural hemorrhage of the thoracic aorta: diagnosis, therapy and prognosis of 209 in vivo diagnosed cases]. 985 55
The aim of this report is to review the single center, clinical experience with the Endovascular Grafting System (EGS/Ancure Endovascular Technologies, Menlo Park, Calif, USA) in the Netherlands. The program was started in January 1994 and at the moment of writing consists of 35 patients on an intention-to-treat basis. From January 1994 through January 1995, 11 patients (Group I) were treated. In January 1995, hook breaks of the attachments system were reported and consequently the EVT program was discontinued from January 1995 through January 1996, pending renewal of FDA approval. From January 1996 through October 1997, another 24 patients were treated with the redesigned EGS-II (group II). Patient and aneurysm characteristics are summarized in the table I. All patients were ASA class I-III and were scheduled for elective repair of asymptomatic infrarenal
AAA
. No compassionate cases or high-risk patients were included in this study. All patients were entered into a prospective follow-up program, including the following studies postoperatively, at 6 weeks, 6 and 12 months, and yearly thereafter. Duplex, plain X-rays and CT-angiography (CTA) with cine-mode post-processing. In Group I, there were 10 tubes and 1 one bifurcated system. The bifurcated EGS was explanted on the 1st postoperative day due to a significant proximal leak and lower
back pain
. Of the 10 tube grafts, 3 have been explanted. In one case (day 2) due to a proximal endoleak, in another case (at 12 months) due to persistent aneurysm growth with a distal endoleak and in the third case (at 3 years) due to a recurrent endoleak with aneurysm growth after initial spontaneous closure and shrinkage. These conversions and their postoperative courses were uneventful. In two cases, proximal hook breaks were detected after 6 and 15 months, but in both patients the aneurysm diameter has decreased and follow-up exceeds 3 years. Another 2 patients are alive more than 3 years after the procedure without signs of endoleak, but in one the aneurysm failed to shrink, probably due to complete circular calcification. The other 3 patients have died during follow-up (6, 11, and 20 months) from diseases unrelated to the aneurysm: one pancreatic carcinoma that had been missed on CT angiography, one respiratory failure and one myocardia infarction. Overall, at three years 4 out of 11 Group I patients are alive and well, with an excluded aneurysm. In Group II, there were 17 bifurcated grafts, 5 tubes, and 2 patients in whom a tube graft could not be placed because the introduction sheath could not pass the iliac artery. In one case, this was complicated by a tear in the external iliac artery. At conversion, both patients needed a conventional bifurcated graft, one extending into the groin to bypass the damaged external iliac artery. In a third patient, a tear in the distal aortic neck was detected intraoperatively after tube endograft placement. Conversion was performed in the same session. Of the 21 endografts that left the operating room, 2 have been explanted. In one case (day 5) a tear of the proximal neck was detected. Conversion to conventional repair involved suprarenal clamping which led to multiple organ failure in this 82-y/o patient who ultimately died. In the other the bifurcated endograft showed a distal endoleak on one side, which was locally repaired by an iliac interposition graft. Three months later a proximal and left distal endoleak was diagnosed, his aneurysm had not decreased in size, and his iliac interposition graft had occluded. He was then successfully converted to a conventional bifurcated graft. In 9 of the remaining 15 bifurcated and 4 tube grafts, endoleak was detected on the postoperative CTA. Five appeared to have closed spontaneously at 6 weeks, conversion has been scheduled in one, and 3 small endoleaks are being observed (2 weeks, 6 and 12 months). In all 35 attempts, there were four cases of injury to the common femoral artery at the introduction site, wh
...
PMID:The Utrecht endovascular technologies (EVT) experience. 989 95
Endoluminal stent graft repair of abdominal and thoracic aortic aneurysms is being performed in increasing numbers. The long-term benefits of this technology remain to be seen. Reports have begun to appear regarding complications of stent graft application, such as renal failure, intestinal infarction, distal embolization, and rupture. Many of these complications have been associated with a fatal outcome. We describe a case of acute, retrograde, type B aortic dissection after application of an endoluminal stent graft for an asymptomatic infrarenal
abdominal aortic aneurysm
. An extent I thoracoabdominal aortic aneurysm subsequently developed and was successfully repaired. Aggressive evaluation of new
back pain
after such a procedure is warranted. Further analysis of the short-term complications and long-term outcome of this new technology is indicated before universal application can be recommended.
...
PMID:Type B aortic dissection and thoracoabdominal aneurysm formation after endoluminal stent repair of abdominal aortic aneurysm. 1023 45
Abdominal aortic aneurysms are believed to result from several factors, one probably being inflammation that leads to dilatation, plaque deposition, and degeneration of the arterial wall. Most of these aneurysms are asymptomatic, but abdominal or
back pain
, shock, and a pulsatile abdominal mass indicate rupture. Initial aneurysm size exceeding 5 cm (2 in.) in diameter and the presence of hypertension and COPD are important predictors of rupture. The overall operative mortality rate with elective repair of an
abdominal aortic aneurysm
has been reported to range from 0.9% to 5% at university medical centers, and it is only slightly higher at community hospitals. However, with a ruptured aneurysm and emergency repair, the mortality rate rises to about 75%. Several long-term studies using life-table methods have found that 5-year survival rates after aneurysm repair range from 49% to 84%. This rate is significantly better than the 5-year survival rate of patients who did not have an
abdominal aortic aneurysm
repaired. However, it is not as good as that of the normal age-matched population, probably because many patients with an aneurysm have concomitant coronary artery disease.
...
PMID:Weighing risks in abdominal aortic aneurysm. Best repaired in an elective, not an emergency, procedure. 1045 40
This article confirms the existence of two variants of acute aortic pathology, the penetrating atherosclerotic ulcer (PAU) and the intramural hematoma (IMH), which are radiologically distinct from classic aortic dissection. Table 4 reviews the characteristics distinguishing PAU from classic aortic dissection and IMH. We took as a matter of definition that classic aortic dissection involves a flap which traverses the aortic lumen. We defined PAU and IMH as nonflap lesions, with PAU demonstrating a crater extending from the aortic lumen into the space surrounding the aortic lumen. This categorization can be summarized with the expression, "no flap, no dissection." With these definitions made, re-review of the imaging studies for the present report identified 36 such lesions out of 214 cases originally read as aortic dissection. Therefore, these variant lesions accounted for over 1 out of 8 acute aortic pathologies. Besides confirming the existence of the conditions, PAU and IMH, as distinct radiographic lesions, this series strongly suggests that these two conditions constitute distinct clinical entities as well. Table 4 summarizes the clinical patterns of these two entities as apparent from the present study, and contrasts them with classic aortic dissections. In particular, the following observations, some of which are consonant findings in smaller series, can be made regarding the typical patient profiles of PAU and IMH from the present study: The patients with PAU and IMH are distinctly older than those with type A aortic dissection (74.0 and 73.9 versus 56.5 years, P = 0.0001). Although not statistically significant, PAU and IMH patients tend to be older than patients with type B aortic dissections as well. For PAU and IMH, unlike aortic dissection, the concentration in the elderly is manifested in a very small standard deviation of the mean age (see Fig. 13); these two entities, PAU and IMH, are essentially diseases of the seventh, eighth, and ninth decades of life. Patients with PAU and IMH are almost invariably hypertensive (about 94% of cases). The pain of PAU and IMH mimics that of classic aortic dissection, with anterior symptoms in the ascending aortic lesions and intrascapular or
back pain
with descending aortic lesions. Unlike classic dissection, PAU and IMH do not produce branch vessel compromise or occlusion and do not result in ischemic manifestations in the extremities or visceral organs. PAU and IMH are more focal lesions than classic aortic dissection, which frequently propagates for much or the entire extent of the thoracoabdominal aorta. PAU is uniformly associated with severe aortic arteriosclerosis and calcification, whereas classic dissection often occurs in aortas with minimal arteriosclerosis and calcification. PAU and IMH tend to occur in even larger aortas than classic aortic dissection (6.2 and 5.5 versus 5.2 cm, P = 0.01). PAU and IMH are strongly associated with
AAA
, which is seen concomitantly in 42.1% of PAU patients and 29.4% of IMH patients. PAU and IMH are largely diseases of the descending aorta (90% for PAU and 71% for IMH). Although our pathology data is limited, we do feel that an inherent difference in the histologic intramural level of the hematoma may underlie the pathophysiologic process that determines which patient develops a typical dissection and which develops an intramural hematoma. In particular, we feel that the level of blood collection is more superficial, closer to the adventitia, in IMH than in typical aortic dissection. This may explain why the inner layer does not prolapse into the aorta on imaging studies or when the aorta is opened in the operating room. This more superficial location would also explain the high rupture rates as compared to classic aortic dissection (Fig. 14, Table 3). We did find PAU and IMH to behave much more malignantly than typical descending aortic dissection. As seen in Figure 6, the rupture rate is much higher than for aortic dissection. Docume
...
PMID:Pathologic variants of thoracic aortic dissections. Penetrating atherosclerotic ulcers and intramural hematomas. 1058 37
The reported incidence of inflammatory
abdominal aortic aneurysm
(IAAA) is from 2% to 14% of patients with
abdominal aortic aneurysm
and the etiology of this disease is still discussed--according to the literature several pathogenic theories have been proposed. From 1992 to 1997 32 patients with IAAA were operated on. The patients were mostly symptomatic--abdominal pain was present in 68.75% cases,
back pain
in 31.25%, fever in 12.5% and weight loss in 6.25% of the operated patients. In all the patients ultrasound examination was performed, in 4 patients CT and in 3 cases urography. All the patients were operated on and characteristic signs of inflammatory
abdominal aortic aneurysm
like: thickened aortic wall, perianeurysmal infiltration or retroperitoneal fibrosis with involvement of retroperitoneal structures were found. In all cases surgery was performed using transperitoneal approach; in three cases intraoperatively contiguous abdominal organs were injured, which was connected with their involvement into periaortic inflammation. In 4 cases clamping of the aorta was done at the level of the diaphragmatic hiatus. 3 patients (9.37%) died (one patient with ruptured
abdominal aortic aneurysm
). Authors present diagnostic procedures and the differences in the surgical tactic, emphasizing the necessity of the surgical therapy in patients with inflammatory
abdominal aortic aneurysm
.
...
PMID:[Inflammatory abdominal aortic aneurysm]. 1080 25
Rupture of an
abdominal aortic aneurysm
often presents with an abdominal pain, hypotension and a pulsatile abdominal mass. In the last years same clinical reports describe patients with less apparent clinical signs who were found later in their evaluation to have a contained rupture of an
abdominal aortic aneurysm
. The diagnosis may be delayed by consideration of other disease causing similar symptoms (herniated disc, renal colic). In these patients with confusing abdominal symptoms CT scan provides a rapid and noninvasive diagnosis. We report three cases of contained rupture of an
abdominal aortic aneurysm
evaluated by computed tomography with different clinical presentation:
back pain
for erosion into the lumbar vertebral bodies, lower extremity neuropathy and obstructive jaundice. All patients were operated on within 24 hours on admission; there was no operative mortality and survival was 100% at one year.
...
PMID:[Chronic rupture of abdominal aortic aneurysms. (Report of 3 cases)]. 1092 Apr 98
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