학술논문

Abdominal aortic aneurysm
Document Type
Article
Source
The Lancet; January 1993, Vol. 341 Issue: 8839 p215-220, 6p
Subject
Language
ISSN
01406736; 1474547X
Abstract
Abdominal aortic aneurysm (AAA) is a disorder that mainly affects the elderly. The prevalence of aneurysmal disease has rapidly increased in individuals aged over 55. Rupture is a common cause of sudden death, and emergency repair has a high risk (40-50%) of perioperative mortality. By contrast, the risk associated with elective resection is substantially less: 3-5%.1As our populations become older, the incidence of AAA will also increase: those people over 60 years of age in Europe will probably increase in number by over 60% to 224 million by 2025.2Thus, AAA will impose increasing burdens on health-service resources. For men aged between 65 and 74 years, the normal range of infrarenal aortic diameter is 2·01±0·51 cm.3Aneurysm sizes range from the smallest, at 3 cm diameter, to those which may reach up to 15 cm diameter. Although many aneurysms remain symptom-free, some may cause abdominal and/or back pain, thereby alerting attention before rupture. Patients with AAA may also have more generalised dilating disease, with aneurysms in femoral, popliteal, or iliac arteries. We present 2 cases: one emergency and one elective aneurysm repair.