Abstract
The clinical course of 76 patients with aortic aneurysmal disease undergoing 107 coincidental surgical procedures was analysed in order to examine the relationship between aortic aneurysmal rupture and coincidental treatment. Additionally the incidence of aneurysmal rupture was assessed following 82 endoscopic procedures in 42 patients with aortic aneurysms. Two patients ruptured an aortic aneurysm after operation, one after colonoscopy (maximal transverse diameter 7 cm) and one after coronary artery bypass grafting (maximal transverse diameter 5.6 cm). The mean maximal transverse diameter of aneurysms in 76 patients was 5.08cm (95% confidence interval 4.7–5.4 cm). Both patients with ruptured aortic aneurysms were outside these confidence limits and were known hypertensives whose perioperative control of hypertension was questionable. The present series of patients is discussed with reference to induction of collagenase activity as a precipitating cause for postoperative rupture of aortic aneurysms, perioperative control of hypertension, transverse aneurysm diameter as a predictor of postoperative rupture and conduct of coincidental procedures in the presence of aneurysmal disease.
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