Abstract
Chronic mesenteric ischaemia (CMI) has a long asymptomatic period, but little is known about the clinical implications of this phase of the disease, particularly in the elderly, who are most exposed to the condition. The aim of the present observational study was to survey the in-hospital clinical course of elderly patients during the non-specific phase of the disease due to occlusion of at least one splanchnic artery. For a median of 29months, we followed up 85 patients aged 65 and over who, for various clinical reasons, had undergone computed tomographic and magnetic resonance angiography during 2010 at Padua Teaching Hospital, assessing economic impact and reasons for admission. Thirty-four of these patients had at least one occluded artery, and 68% of them had at least one hospital admission. Elderly CMI patients were characterised by a higher number of admissions (median 2 vs 1 p=0.05) and a higher cost (6044 vs 1733 Euros p=0.04), but did not present typical gastrointestinal symptoms. The higher number of hospital admissions was not due to specific clinical risks (admitting wards: general medicine: 32 vs 29%, p=0.77; general surgery 8 vs 14%, p=0.73; vascular surgery: 26.5 vs 20%, p=0.46). In the asymptomatic phase of CMI, hospitalised elderly patients with at least one occluded splanchnic artery can be subject to a more challenging in-hospital clinical course.
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