Abstract

Objective: To examine the perioperative clinical features and prognosis of patients with ruptured abdominal aortic aneurysms (rAAA) who received surgical repair. Methods: The clinical data of rAAA patients who underwent surgical repair and were admitted to the Surgical Intensive Care Unit of Beijing Anzhen Hospital, Capital Medical University from August 2005 to November 2020 were retrospectively analyzed, including the general clinical features, surgical mode, intraoperative conditions, postoperative complications, and fatality rate. Results: There were 117 patients with rAAA, with a median age of 68 (62,77) years, including 93 men (79.5%) and 24 women (20.5%). The main clinical manifestation was abdominal pain (n=115, 98.3%). Among them, 65 (55.6%) patients underwent endovascular aneurysm repair (EVAR), while 52 (44.4%) underwent open surgical repair (OSR). The common postoperative complications include acute gastrointestinal dysfunction (n=116, 99.1%), shock (n=89, 76.1%), acute respiratory distress syndrome (n=85, 72.6%), pancreatic injury (n=56, 47.9%), coagulation dysfunction (n=55, 47.0%), disseminated intravascular coagulation (n=46, 39.3%), acute kidney injury (n=39, 33.3%), infection/sepsis (n=28, 23.9%), gastrointestinal bleeding (n=17, 14.5%), and abdominal compartment syndrome (n=12, 10.3%). The overall postoperative in-hospital fatality rate was 10.3% (12/117). Preoperative use of vasopressors and inotropes, retroperitoneal hematoma, and postoperative abdominal compartment syndrome, gastrointestinal hemorrhage, acute kidney injury, and diffuse intravascular coagulation significantly increased the fatality rate [5/11, 6/24, 5/16, 6/12, 6/17, 23.1%(9/39), 19.6%(9/46), respectively]. Conclusion: The postoperative mortality of rAAA patients is still high in the era of EVAR, especially in patients with preoperative existence of shock and retroperitoneal hematoma, and with postoperative abdominal compartment syndrome, coagulation dysfunction, and acute kidney injury. It is necessary to strengthen perioperative monitoring and management of these patients to reduce the fatality rate.

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