Abstract
The objective of this study was to determine the role of a mortality registration in the quality control of patients who died after peripheral bypass surgery. We developed a mortality registration to classify causes of death, to evaluate shortcomings in treatment, and to determine the extent of agreement between pre- and postmortem findings. In a 10-year period, 28 of the 1,022 patients (2.7%) who underwent peripheral arterial reconstruction died. Fifty-three percent of the patients died owing to postoperative complications, most frequently a myocardial infarction. A shortcoming in the medical treatment was observed in only one patient. Forty-three percent of the relatives gave permission for an autopsy. In only two cases, the autopsy report revealed a myocardial infarction that had remained unnoticed during the clinical course. In this selected group of patients undergoing a peripheral bypass operation, the causes of death and the shortcomings in medical care could usually be identified without the help of autopsy data.
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