Publication | Open Access
Management and Long-term Outcome of Aortic Dissection
188
Citations
45
References
1991
Year
Endovascular TechniqueCardiovascular DiseaseAortic DiseasesAtherosclerosisVascular SurgeryThoracic SurgerySurgeryType Iii DissectionEndovascular ManagementValvular Heart DiseasePublic HealthMedicineType Iii DissectionsCardiologyArterial DiseaseAortic DissectionAnesthesiology
All 163 patients admitted to one institution between 1975 and 1988 with aortic dissection were reviewed. Type I and type II patients received grafting of the ascending aorta, with an intraoperative mortality rate of 11%. For type III dissection, management was medical in 53 patients, while 19 required surgery for aortic rupture or expansion, with an intraoperative mortality rate of 11%. The 9- or 10-year survival rates were 29%, 46%, and 29% for types I, II, and III respectively. Of 135 patients with primary aortic dissection, 17 (13%) required subsequent aortic surgery. Cause of late death was other cardiovascular disease in 38%, rupture of another aortic segment in 18%, sudden death in 24%, and other medical conditions in 21%. Although operative therapy for types I and II dissections and reserving operation for selected type III dissections provides acceptable long-term survival, careful follow-up is necessary due to concurrent cardiovascular disease and residual aortic disease.
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