Abstract

Acute aortic occlusion is most often seen in elderly patients with advanced cardiac disease. The management of these patients has been facilitated by the use of extraanatomic bypass. Over the past 2 years, six patients aged 55 to 87 years presented to our medical center with acute aortic occlusion, three after major operative procedures. One patient had a thrombosed abdominal aortic aneurysm; in the other five patients differentiation between saddle embolus and thrombosis of the distal aorta was impossible. There was one operative death. Four of the other five patients underwent axillobifemoral bypass and one underwent aortofemoral thrombectomy. All survived, and none required amputation. Two of the three patients who underwent preoperative aortography developed transient renal failure postoperatively. Aortography is of little value in diagnosis and is probably contraindicated in acute aortic occlusion. Our recommendation for operative management includes (1) preparation of the patient for possible axillobifemoral bypass, (2) angiography of distal runoff via both femoral arteries, (3) attempt at bilateral aortofemoral embolectomy with Fogarty catheters, and (4) axillobifemoral bypass if embolectomy fails to restore normal pulsatile flow.

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