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Ruptured abdominal aortic aneurysm: Impact of comorbidity and postoperative complications on outcome
Authors:Jean M. Panneton MD  FRCSC  Jean Lassonde MD  FRCSC  Fernand Laurendeau MD  FRCSC
Affiliation:(1) Division of Vascular Surgery, Maisonneuve-Rosemont Hospital, Department of Surgery, University of Montreal, Montreal, Quebec, Canada;(2) Department of Surgery, St. Boniface Hospital, 409 Taché Ave., R2H 2A6 Winnipeg, MB, Canada
Abstract:Ruptured abdominal aortic aneurysm (AAA) remains a common and highly lethal problem. This study evaluates the morbidity and mortality rates and aims to identify which clinical variables could predict the outcome. We reviewed the records of 112 patients (97 men and 15 women) operated on for ruptured infrarenal AAA within the past 12 years (April 1, 1980, to March 31, 1992). Forty-seven clinical variables were collected and correlated with outcome by univariate and multivariate analysis. Mean age was 72.4 years (range 51 to 89 years). Only 12.5% were known to have an AAA before rupture. Preoperative systolic pressure <90 mm Hg was present in 84 patients (75%) and 11 patients (9.8%) experienced cardiac arrest before surgery. The in-hospital mortality rate was 49.1% (55/112). Two preoperative variables were associated with increased mortality: systolic pressure <90 mm Hg and cardiac arrest (p = 0.04 andp= 0.009, respectively). Preoperative comorbidity had no impact on outcome. Massive blood loss (ge5000 ml) was an intraoperative factor predictive of increased mortality (p = 0.0007). After multivariate analysis, only the following five postoperative variables were associated with increased mortality: cardiac event, renal failure requiring dialysis, coagulopathy, bleeding, and multisystem organ failure (allp <0.05). We did not identify a preoperative factor that predicts certain death and allows us to deny a patient a chance at survival. The occurrence of multisystem organ failure is associated with no survivors and raises the ethical issue of withholding treatment for these patients in the postoperative course. We favor selective screening and aggressive elective repair to improve survival by operating before rupture occurs.Presented at the Fifteenth Annual Meeting of the Canadian Society for Vascular Surgery, Vancouver, B.C., September 10–12, 1993, and at the Fourth Annual Winter Meeting of the Peripheral Vascular Surgery Society, Breckenridge, Colo., January 21–23, 1994.
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