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Query: UMLS:C0162871 (abdominal aortic aneurysm)
8,664 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Intravascular clotting and fibrinolysis (C and F) are events which often accompany major surgical trauma. Their role in inducing cardiopulmonary failure is debated and prompted this study of 13 patients undergoing elective AAA. Following intubation, anesthesia and pressure breathing fibrinolytic activity (FA) in arterial blood exceeded that in mixed venous blood (p < 0.001) indicating pulmonary secretion of proteolytic activity. Fibrinogen, plasminogen and fibrin degradation products (FDPs) were normal. During surgery, fibrinogen and plasminogen fell (p < 0.001) while nonplasmin mediated FA and FDPs rose (p < .001). Despite heparinization (5000 U IV) aortic clamping (avg 56 min) led to evidence of C and F within the lungs. Arterial fibrinogen was 33.2 mg/ml lower than mixed venous blood (p < 0.01) and plasminogen was 0.47 Sherry units lower (p < 0.001). Soluble fibrin monomer appeared in arterial blood (p < 0.01). At the same time nonplasmin mediated FA was consumed within the lungs (p < 0.01) and FDPs were produced (44.6 microg/ml higher in arterial blood, p < 0.001). Similar changes were noted after aortic declamping. The transient 5.3 ml/cm H(2)0 fall in dynamic compliance was unrelated to C and F. Pulmonary vascular resistance and arterial pressure were unchanged. During wound closure intrapulmonary C and F ceased. Postoperatively (6 h), the physiologic shunt of 15.1% was similar to tbe preoperative value of 13.3%. All C and F factors returned to normal except FDPs which remained elevated. An average of 0.2 U blood was given prior to aortic clamping and 3.1 U during clamping. Neither the volume nor the type of blood (7 patients received washed RBCs) influenced pulmonary C and F. The results show that pressure breathing will alter pulmonary metabolism from clearance to secretion of fibrinolytic activity. Surgery leads to systemic C and F while intrapulmonary C and F is triggered by aortic clamping despite IV heparin. Delayed functional consequences of C and F are possible. Immediate postoperative effects are not apparent.
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PMID:Intrapulmonary clotting and fibrinolysis during abdominal aortic aneurysm surgery. 50 73

Myocardial depression has been suggested as a cause of declamping hypotension. To investigate and manage this problem, thermal dilution catheters were placed in 22 elderly, high-risk patients (mean age 71 years) who underwent elective abdominal aortic aneurysm resection. There were no deaths. Myocardial performance curves (MPC) were determined preoperatively, following induction of anesthesia, during aortic clamping, following declamping, and 12 to 48 hours postoperatively. The slope of this curve was taken as an index of myocardial performance. Preoperative cardiac index at a pulmonary artery wedge pressure of 10 mm Hg (CI10) decreased significantly following induction of anesthesia (P less than .002) and persisted during aortic cross-clamping. Following declamping, CI10 rose to preoperative levels. The slope of the MPC followed this same pattern. There was no significant change in blood pressure with the aorta clamped or following declamping. Myocardial performance is depressed following induction of anesthesia but declamping hypotension can be minimized or prevented by optimum volume loading as guided by Starling's myocardial performance curves.
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PMID:Assessment of myocardial performance and optimal volume loading during elective abdominal aortic aneurysm resection. 92 28

We retrospectively reviewed the records of 88 patients who underwent a total of 95 in-situ bypass operations. Seventy-eight percent were diabetics, 56% hypertensives, 23% had a history of a myocardial infarction, 18% a previous stroke or transient ischemic attack, and 19% a renal transplant. Eighty-eight percent had general anesthesia. Eighty-four percent of the operations extended distal to the popliteal trifurcation, with an average operating time of 5.12 +/- 1.25 hours and blood loss of 354 +/- 239 ml. The overall mortality was 4.2%, with two deaths due to wound sepsis and two deaths due to congestive heart failure. The perioperative myocardial infarction rate was 6.3%. The average age of the patients who died was significantly greater than the age of those who survived (78.2 +/- 17.7 years vs. 59.9 +/- 14.8 years, p less than 0.05). The Goldman risk index was not helpful in predicting cardiac complications. The results show that patients undergoing in-situ bypass operations are at high risk for cardiovascular complications. Aggressive perioperative evaluation and management similar to that shown to reduce such complications in abdominal aortic aneurysm surgery should be helpful.
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PMID:Complications and mortality of the in-situ saphenous vein bypass for lower extremity ischemia. 153 65

This study reports on animal experimentation and initial clinical trials exploring the feasibility of exclusion of an abdominal aortic aneurysm by placement of an intraluminal, stent-anchored, Dacron prosthetic graft using retrograde cannulation of the common femoral artery under local or regional anesthesia. Experiments showed that when a balloon-expandable stent was sutured to the partially overlapping ends of a tubular, knitted Dacron graft, friction seals were created which fixed the ends of the graft to the vessel wall. This excludes the aneurysm from circulation and allows normal flow through the graft lumen. Initial treatment in five patients with serious co-morbidities is described. Each patient had an individually tailored balloon diameter and diameter and length of their Dacron graft. Standard stents were used and the diameter of the stent-graft was determined by sonography, computed tomography, and arteriography. In three of them a cephalic stent was used without a distal stent. In two other patients both ends of the Dacron tubular stent were attached to stents using a one-third stent overlap. In these latter two, once the proximal neck of the aneurysm was reached, the sheath was withdrawn and the cephalic balloon inflated with a saline/contrast solution. The catheter was gently removed caudally towards the arterial entry site in the groin to keep tension on the graft, and the second balloon inflated so as to deploy the second stent. Four of the five patients had heparin reversal at the end of the procedure. We are encouraged by this early experience, but believe that further developments and more clinical trials are needed before this technique becomes widely used.
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PMID:Transfemoral intraluminal graft implantation for abdominal aortic aneurysms. 183 29

It has been found that the effects of tooth extraction under acupuncture anesthesia (AA) for the old patients are generally quite good. In order to verify this result, the authors had statistically analysed 825 cases aged over 60 years (Group A) and equal quantity whose age were between 18-40 years old (Group B) out of more than 4000 cases whose records of AA were rather completely during 1973 to 1988. 1. There was no significant difference under AA for different sexes. 2. The differences of the excellent rate of AA between Group A and Group B were extremely evident either in the positions of the tooth or the reason of tooth extraction. The former was 89.04% and the latter 76.20% (P less than 0.005). 3. Although a low rate in excellence of tooth extraction under simple AA (only 75.58%), not so good as the effect by AAA (an average about 88.21%), the simple AA was more common and more easier to be accepted by patients. 4. Tooth extraction under AA has been proved to be safe, effective and without any complications. 5. The reasons for the senior to extract their teeth were almost for the broken crowns and of roots or the purposes of prosthetic restoration. Even though the pain thresholds in the senior were commonly higher. It is still an important factor of the good effect and good rate of tooth extraction under AA. Referring to the statistics in this study the authors suggest that the hospitals which can use the AA for tooth extraction adopt the method as the first choice of anesthesia method to the senior who intends to accept it.
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PMID:[Analysing the effects of tooth extraction under acupuncture anesthesia in 825 cases of senior]. 187 94

It has been assumed by some authors that patients with abdominal aortic aneurysms may be at increased risk of rupture after unrelated operations. From July 1986 to December 1989, 33 patients (29 men, 4 women) with a known abdominal aortic aneurysm underwent 45 operations. Twenty-eight patients had an infrarenal abdominal aortic aneurysm, and five patients had a thoracoabdominal aneurysm. The abdominal aortic aneurysm ranged in transverse diameter from 3.0 to 8.5 cm (average 5.6 cm). Twenty-seven patients underwent a single operation, and six patients had two or more (range of 1 to 6). Operations performed were abdominal (13); cardiothoracic (9); head/neck (2); other vascular (11); urologic (7); amputation (2); breast (1). General anesthesia was used in 29 procedures, spinal/epidural in 6, and regional/local in 10. One postoperative death occurred from cardiopulmonary failure. One patient died of a ruptured abdominal aortic aneurysm at 20 days after coronary artery bypass (1/33 patients [3%]; 1/45 operations [2%]). Fourteen patients had repair of their abdominal aortic aneurysm at a later date, an average of 18 weeks after operation. Four patients had abdominal aortic aneurysm considered too small to warrant resection (average 3.6 cm). Four patients were considered at excessive risk for elective repair. The five thoracoabdominal aneurysm were not repaired. Four patients are awaiting repair. During this same 40-month period, two other patients, not known to have an abdominal aortic aneurysm, died of a ruptured abdominal aortic aneurysm after another operative procedure, at 21 days and 77 days. All three ruptured abdominal aortic aneurysms were 5.0 cm or greater in transverse diameter.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Probability of rupture of an abdominal aortic aneurysm after an unrelated operative procedure: a prospective study. 199 Jan 66

Decreased cardiac output and increased plasma thromboxane have been observed during aortic cross-clamping under general anesthesia. Amelioration of these changes has been reported by preoperative administration of cyclooxygenase inhibitors, but heterogeneity in patients' intravascular volume status has confounded analysis of the drugs' effects in previous studies. We studied hemodynamic conditions in 24 volume-loaded (pulmonary capillary wedge pressure greater than 10 mm Hg) patients undergoing abdominal aortic aneurysm repair under general plus epidural anesthesia, after preoperative double-blind administration of either ibuprofen 800 mg (n = 12) or placebo (n = 12). The hemodynamic response to aortic cross-clamping was similar in both groups. Pulse and mean arterial pressure remained unchanged; cardiac index decreased after aortic cross-clamping from 2.4 +/- 0.1 (mean +/- standard error of the mean [SEM]) to 2.1 +/- 0.1 1/min/m2 in the ibuprofen group and from 2.5 +/- 0.1 to 2.3 +/- 0.2 1/min/m2 in the placebo group (p less than 0.01 versus preclamp values in both groups, multivariate analysis of variance [MANOVA]), but improved after declamping. Both left and right ventricular stroke work indexes followed a similar pattern. Plasma 6-keto prostaglandin Fl alpha (6-k-PGF1 alpha) increased transiently from a baseline level of 304 +/- 44 to 2083 +/- 698 pg/ml plasma in mixed venous blood 30 minutes after incision in the placebo group (p less than 0.05), but no other significant change in plasma 6-keto prostaglandin Fl alpha or in thromboxane B2 occurred in either group at any other time.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:The effect of ibuprofen on cardiac performance during abdominal aortic cross-clamping. 203 9

This report describes the case of an 80-year-old woman with a long history of chronic, stable angina pectoris who underwent resection of an abdominal aortic aneurysm and placement of an aortobifemoral bypass graft under a combination of epidural and general anesthesia. Epidural morphine was administered postoperatively for pain management. The patient suffered a massive myocardial infarction (MI) in the immediate postoperative period but experienced no chest pain or discomfort similar to her usual anginal symptoms. The use of epidural and spinal opioids in the treatment of anginal pain is reviewed and discussed in terms of the possibility that such epidural opioid therapy may have masked this patient's anginal symptoms.
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PMID:Acute myocardial infarction symptoms masked by epidural morphine? 203 43

We administered general anesthesia for an emergency abdominal surgery due to duodenal ulcer hemorrhage. The patient was in postoperative state after femoral supracondylar fracture, in pre-shock state, of old age (97 y-o), with severe anemia, and hypoproteinemia, and complicated with a giant abdominal aneurysm and mild aortic regurgitation. Before the operation, the patient was transferred to ICU and had intravascular volume replaced (infused with blood 600 ml, crystalloid fluid 2000 ml, colloid fluid 500 ml) and received stomach lavage. Under monitoring of direct arterial pressure, after fully pre-oxygenation, fentanyl 0.1mg was administered slowly, and crush induction was performed by a small dose of thiopental and SCC. After induction of anesthesia systolic blood pressure decreased to 60 mmHg temporarily and it was maintained between 80 and 120 mmHg during the surgery, but tachycardia continued (90-110.min-1). In order to treat oliguria owing to pre-shock state, we administered dopamine and urinastatin continuously. The patient was transferred to ICU postoperatively and close attention was paid. Postoperative pain controlled was well by epidural morphine and bupivacaine. The postoperative course was uneventful without any complications. Twenty three days later, abdominal aortic aneurysm resection was performed uneventfully. In this paper, problems of preanesthetic and anesthetic management of emergency abdominal surgery for an aged patient were discussed.
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PMID:[Anesthetic experience in emergency abdominal surgery in a 97-year-old patient complicated with a giant abdominal aneurysm]. 258 3

Aortic aneurysm occurs rarely in childhood. Most aneurysms in children are associated with conditions such as Marfan's syndrome, coarctation of the aorta, Ehlers-Danlos syndrome and neurofibromatosis. We report a case of descending thoracic-abdominal aortic aneurysm in an eighteen month old boy with a mask-like face, ocular hypertelorism, blepharoptosis, a high arched palate and low set ears. He was scheduled for a bypass graft of the descending thoracic and abdominal aorta under partial cardiopulmonary bypass. High dose morphine anesthesia (2mg/kg) was employed and halothane was used to control the blood pressure. To our knowledge, anesthetic management of such an infant had not been reported. Therefore, we anesthetized this child according to anesthetic managements for adult cases considering carefully the boy's multiple anomalies. Anesthetic managements for the surgery of aortic aneurysms in childhood are discussed.
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PMID:[Anesthetic management in surgery of a descending aortic aneurysm in an eighteen-month-old boy]. 270 3


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