Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
2990339 Journal of Vascular Surgery 2012 6 Pages PDF
Abstract

ObjectiveTo present endovascular techniques in the treatment of juxtarenal aortic aneurysms (JAAAs) in relation to surgical repair; this is the “gold standard.”MethodsBetween January 2008 and December 2010, 90 consecutive patients were diagnosed with primary degenerative JAAAs (≥5.0 cm) and assigned prospectively to different operative strategies on the basis of morphologic and clinical characteristics. In particular, 59 patients were treated by endovascular means such as fenestrated endovascular abdominal aortic repair (f-EVAR, n = 29) or chimney endovascular abdominal aortic repair (ch-EVAR, n = 30) endografting, and 31 patients underwent open repair (OR, n = 31).ResultsEarly procedure-related and all-cause (30-day) procedure-related mortality was 0% for the endovascular group and 6.4% (n = 2/31) for the OR group, due to systemic inflammatory response syndrome with consecutive multi-organ failure (P = .023). Persistent postoperative hemodialysis occurred only after OR (2/31; 6.4%). The overall estimated pre- and postoperative median estimated glomerular filtration rate and creatinine values were similar in the three subgroups. There was one left renal artery occlusion for each endovascular subgroup, which presented as flank pain and was treated by iliaco-renal bypass in both cases. Transfusion requirements and length of hospital stay were significantly less in the endovascular group (P = .014 and P = .004, respectively).ConclusionsEndovascular treatment of JAAA is a safe alternative for the short-term management of JAAA.

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