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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 incidence of inflammatory
abdominal aortic aneurysm
(IAAA) is reported in between 5 and 15% of all cases of abdominal aortic aneurysms (AAA). As a diagnostic hint the CT- or
MRI
-scan shows the ureters typically displaced medially, caused by a simultaneously visible retroperitoneal perianeurysmal fibrosis. In IAAA, one has to expect about 25% ureteral congestion, uni- or bilateral. Since the probability of rupture of IAAA--in the natural course between 15 and 25% of the cases--does not apparently differ much from the arteriosclerotic AAA, the operative aorto-iliac reconstruction with bypass grafting is the only solution and procedure of choice. Postoperatively, renal insufficiency caused by congestion normalizes: long-term follow-up by CT-scanning demonstrates the regression of both retroperitoneal fibrotic process and ureteral entrapment. Therefore, the dangerous ureterolysis results to be unnecessary. Hydronephrosis due to ureteral obstruction following aorto-iliac bypass grafting, if progressive or symptomatic, should be treated first non-operatively by ureteral splint.
...
PMID:[Inflammatory aneurysm of the abdominal aorta and ureteral obstruction]. 263 97
This work was aimed at assessing the usefulness of magnetic resonance angiography (MRA) in the investigation and diagnosis of vena cava conditions. Forty-five subjects that is 20 volunteers and 25 patients, were examined with MRA using a 1.5 T superconductive system (SE and angiography pulse sequences). In the 25 patients, 8 cases of thrombosis were diagnosed, together with 4 cases of suspected tumor spread into either the superior or the inferior vena cava, 2 cases of inferior vena cava agenesis, 5 cases of retroaortic left renal vein and 5 cases of
abdominal aortic aneurysm
. MRA was performed with the 2D time-of-flight (TOF) technique (FA 18 degrees, TR 30-40 ms, TE 10 ms); the images were acquired on the coronal, sagittal and axial planes with and without presaturation pulse and rotated in the post-processing according to the maximum intensity projection. In all volunteers MRA identified jugular veins, subclavian veins, anonymous veins, superior vena cava, inferior vena cava and common iliac veins. The main limitation of MRA was its spatial resolution. MRA proved to be less accurate than SE sequences in the assessment of tumor spread. As for thrombotic conditions, MRA provided useful additional information and is therefore considered a complementary technique to SE
MRI
. As for venous anomalies (double inferior vena cava, vena cava agenesis and retroaortic left renal vein) and in the study of the relationships with abdominal aortic aneurysms, MRA proved to be the more accurate of the two techniques.
...
PMID:[The superior and inferior venae cavae: angiography by TOF 2D magnetic resonance versus spin-echo sequences]. 804 30
The dilatation of the vascular grafts is a well known phenomenon. It is usually evaluated by means of ultrasounds or, in selected cases, by CT scans or
MRI
; nevertheless its characteristics are far beyond to be fully recognized. Following our promising preliminary experience with helical CT as sole preoperative imaging for
AAA
, we have evaluated its reliability in the postoperative follow-up. We have studied 12 patients with aorto-iliac and 11 with aorto-femoral bypass for
AAA
, with a follow-up ranging between 1 and 3 years. A helical CT acquisition was performed during a single breath-holding with a 5-mm slice thickness, thus resulting in a 30 cm z-axis coverage. Axial images were reconstructed at 2-mm increments and used to generate high quality multiplanar reformatted (MPR) and three-dimensional (3D) surface rendered images. For each patient we evaluated the characteristics of the graft, the maximal diameters and the wall modifications. The average expansion was 28% at 1 year, stable at 2 years and then increased up to 44% at 3 years. Considering the different types of Dacron grafts, the dilatation was ranging between 22% and 46% (21 cases). The mean expansion was 31.3% and 29.5% for the trunk and for the branches of the graft respectively. No perigraft seroma nor anastomotic aneurysms were detected. A peculiar observation, both with and without contrast medium injection, was that all the grafts made on Dacron were not anymore depictable from the aortic wall after 1 year; the contrary was observed for the ePTFE grafts.
...
PMID:[Postoperative evaluation of vascular bifurcation prostheses by means of helical CT]. 892 50
The aim of this cross-sectional study was to evaluate the validity of current imaging methods for diagnosing anastomotic false aneurysms (AFA) of the aorta. One hundred four patients who had undergone elective
abdominal aortic aneurysm
repair between January 1, 1985, and May 31, 1991, were studied. All of them were investigated for potential development of an aortic anastomotic aneurysm by B-mode ultrasonography, CT scanning, digital subtraction arteriography, and
MRI
. These findings were compared with results of color-coded Doppler imaging, which is considered the "gold standard," and were subsequently classified as true positive or true negative. The accuracy of color Doppler ultrasound was independently evaluated by clinical examination of the patients, which was carried out for a mean period of 77.5 months during follow-up. On the basis of the data obtained and observations made during follow-up (mean 36.4 months), the sensitivity and specificity of the preceding imaging methods were estimated. Aortic anastomotic aneurysms were detected in two patients (1.9%). The sensitivity of all methods was 100% and specificity was as follows: 74.2% for ultrasound, 59.8% for nonenhanced CT scans, 85.4% for enhanced CT scans, and 99% for digital subtraction arteriograms. Color Doppler and
MRI
were 100% specific for ruling out aortic anastomotic aneurysms. In a comparison of the accuracy, estimated cost, safety, and the availability of each method, color Doppler appeared to be the diagnostic method of choice for identifying aortic anastomotic aneurysms after
abdominal aortic aneurysm
repair.
...
PMID:The validity of current vascular imaging methods in the evaluation of aortic anastomotic aneurysms developing after abdominal aortic aneurysm repair. 898 70
In order to evaluate the incidence, the diagnostic modalities and significance of blisters of the
abdominal aortic aneurysm
wall, in a retrospective review, 14 patients (2.6%) having these lesions were identified between 1983 and 1995. At preoperative examination, aortography had less accuracy (1 case = 20%) than CT scan (3 cases = 27.2%) or
MRI
angiography (6 cases = 85.7%) to detect blisters; others were discovered intraoperatively in the remaining four patients. Most blisters were located on the anterior or antero-lateral wall of aneurysms; its area ranged from 0.8 to 2.6 cm2. One patient with a suspected blister diagnosed at aortography, during chest physiotherapy for his COPD, presented sudden abdominal pain: at urgent laparotomy, an acute contained rupture of a large blister, without extraluminal blood loss, was found. All patients underwent aneurysm repair, with no postoperative deaths. Occurrence of rupture in one patient clearly indicates the natural course of aortic blisters.
MRI
angiography may accurately detect these lesions; surgical treatment is necessary for preventing imminent rupture.
...
PMID:Aortic blisters: diagnosis and evolution. 933 50
The purpose of this study was to determine the accuracy of an interventional magnetic resonance imaging (iMRI) system to position an endovascular catheter in an in vitro model that simulated an infrarenal aortic aneurysm. Adequate visualization of abdominal aortic aneurysms (AAAs) was shown previously in humans. A dedicated near-real-time imaging protocol readily available on a Signa SP 0.5T open configuration
MRI
unit (General Electric Medical Systems, Milwaukee, WI, USA) was used to image the AAAs of ten human volunteers. A pulsatile in vitro model that simulated an
AAA
was built, which included the kidneys, the renal arteries, the aorta, and the iliac arteries. A catheter was advanced to a predetermined target through one of the iliac limbs of the model. Using two different techniques, the accuracy with which an interventionist could position the endovascular catheter under the near-real-time guidance of the iMRI system was evaluated. The AAAs of all ten patients were visualized, including the aneurysm wall, the thrombus within it, and the residual lumen, while maintaining adequate contrast, signal, and imaging speed. The position of the catheter was evaluated on target in 42 in vitro procedures. This series of tests showed an average accuracy of 1 mm for catheter positioning. The near-real-time imaging mode of the iMRI system enabled satisfactory evaluation of human AAAs, and it showed great accuracy for catheter positioning in the in vitro model. These results provide optimism regarding the potential of iMRI in endovascular surgery.
...
PMID:In vitro evaluation of the accuracy of open-configuration MRI in endovascular techniques. 1096 52
A case of 69-year-old male patient with recurrent
abdominal aortic aneurysm
is described. The patient had been successfully operated on for infrarenal
abdominal aortic aneurysm
4 years before, and 2 months postoperatively dilatation of juxtarenal part of abdominal aorta was diagnosed in ultrasonic examination. Due to progressive enlargement of juxtarenal aneurysm the patient was admitted to hospital again and operated on. Excision of aneurysm with implantation of both renal arteries to the prosthesis was done. The perioperative course was uneventful. Authors emphasize the importance of evaluation of abdominal aorta after operative treatment of aneurysm (ultrasonic, CT,
MRI
) to diagnose recurrent aneurysms.
...
PMID:[Repeated excision of abdominal aortic aneurysm--case report]. 1124 16
The incidence of inflammatory
abdominal aortic aneurysm
(IAAA) in a late review of the literature is estimated about 2-15% overall aortic aneurysms. In our data this type of aneurysm is 3.6 overall aortic aneurysms treated. In the majority of the cases, IAAA is juxtarenal or infrarenal. Ethiopathogenesis of IAAA till today is not certain. Recent hypothesis on IAAA attribute the same ethiopathogenesis in both atherosclerotic and inflammatory aneurysm. The interaction of genetic, environmental and infective factors should be able to determine an autoimmune inflammatory reaction of variable severity. 80% of the patients suffering from IAAA present abdominal or lumbar pain, loss of weight and increase of the RC sedimentation velocity. The IAAA's natural history goes to rupture. Entrapment of nearstanding organs totally involved in the fibrotic process is the most frequent complication. Usually there is a compression of the ureter and the duodenum with consequenced hydroureteronephrosis and bowel obstruction. Preoperative diagnosis is possible; CT scan and
MRI
guarantee and accuracy about 90%. Intraoperatively the external wall of IAAA appears whitish and translucent and always there are tenacious adhesion given by the avventital wounds inflammation. Confirm is given by the histological examination of the aneurysmatic wall and peravventitial tissues. Our experience and a late review of the literature concorde that surgical indication for the treatment of IAAA is the same for the atherosclerotic one. This conviction is supported by the fact that the diagnostic methodical evolution and the improvement in mininvasive surgical technique lowered perioperating morbility and mortaliy. We prefer, according with many authors, retroperitoneal approach to juxtarenal IAAA, instead of standardized transperitoneal access with xifo-pubical or transversal under costal incision. This approach offers some advantages as easier exposition of aorta, whose postero-lateral wall is hardly ever involved in inflammatory process, little duodenum's and left renal veins manipulation and low incidence of paralytic ileum and respiratory disease. Endovascular surgery hasn't in this moment any role in juxtarenal IAAA treatment because this type of aneurysm has inadequate proximal neck. In the future, probably, endovascular repair will be possible using a new type of endograft with renal legs. Often surgical treatment is inadequate to control retroperitorenal fibrosis and so surgeon has to use perioperating pharmacolocical therapy.
...
PMID:[Approach to juxtarenal inflammatory aneurysms]. 1538 92
Inflammatory aneurysm of the abdominal aorta is a rare disorder, affecting approximately 3-10% of the population with a diagnosis of the
abdominal aortic aneurysm
. The principal etiological agents of the disorder include bacterial microorganisms, primarily Salmonella, Staphylococcus aureus, and Escherichia coli. However, in many cases the etiology od the disorder remains unclear and, likely, autoimmune and genetic dispositions may play a certain role, as well. The principal diagnostic procedures include ultrasound, CT and
MRI
examinations. The principal therapeutic procedures include open resection of the inflammatory aneurysm with complete removal of the infectious tissue and its replacement by a prosthesis or a vascular allograft "in situ" or through an extraantomical reconstructive procedure. New procedures also include endovascular therapy which is technically much simpler, less demanding for a patient, however, it may leave a potential infectious focus in the organism with a risk of further septic complications to follow. Therefore, the authors recommend a strictly individual treatment strategy in each patient with this serious disorder. In case of positive cultivation bacteriological findings, extended (a minimum of 6 weeks) antibiotic therapy and regular, long-term patient follow-up with regular visits, are essential.
...
PMID:[An inflammatory aneurysm of the abdominal aorta]. 1593 74
A 67-year-old man was admitted with a saccular aneurysm of the abdominal aorta. Preoperative CT revealed cylindrical calcification of the abdominal aorta and the patent internal iliac arteries (IIAs). At the elective surgery, a cylinder-shaped and severely calcified intimal layer was found, and the lumbar arteries were totally occluded. Hypotension caused by the loose iliac clamp due to severe calcification continued for 15 minutes and long-time cross clamp was necessary. Monoparesis of the left lower extremity and dysuria occurred postoperatively. Spinal
MRI
revealed small infarction at the Th10 level. Symptoms improved and he could walk with a cane and within a few months no uninary catheter support was needed. Thoracic spinal cord infarction after
abdominal aortic aneurysm
(
AAA
) surgery and a severely calcified abdominal aorta indicated the importance of the blood flow in the IIA as the significant source of spinal blood supply. To prevent spinal cord injury (SCI) which is rare but significant complication of
AAA
surgery, understanding of the spinal blood supply, quick surgery, and complete revascularization of pelvic arteries are important.
...
PMID:Monoparesis after graft replacement of non-ruptured abdominal aortic aneurysm. 1709 85
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