Purpose: To explore a method of combined endovascular/conventional treatment of abdominal aortic aneurysm (AAA), in which the iliac arteries are reconstructed by conventional surgical techniques to provide the anatomic substrate for subsequent endovascular repair of the aortic aneurysm. Method: A 77-year-old patient with severe cardiac disease was found to have a 6.5-cm AAA, bilateral common iliac artery (CIA) aneurysms, and diffusely narrowed, tortuous external iliac arteries. The left internal iliac artery was occluded. At operation, the right CIA was exposed through a transverse retroperitoneal incision under epidural anesthesia. An iliobifemoral bypass was constructed using a preformed bifurcated graft. A stent-graft was delivered through the right limb of the bifurcated iliobifemoral graft. The proximal end of the stent-graft was implanted in the neck of the aneurysm, and the distal end was deployed in the common trunk of the iliobifemoral graft, thereby excluding the AAA and both native iliac arteries from prograde arterial flow. Results: Completion angiography and follow-up contrast computed tomography showed the aneurysm to be excluded from the circulation. The patient was not intubated, was never hemodynamically unstable, and had aortic blood flow interrupted for no more than 20 seconds. In addition, he was able to resume his usual diet on the first postoperative day. He continues to be well and without evidence of endoleak at 6-month follow-up. Conclusions: This case demonstrates that iliac artery stenosis, tortuosity, and aneurysmal dilatation are not impediments to endovascular AAA exclusion. Any necessary surgical modifications of pelvic arterial anatomy can be performed before stent-graft insertion to minimize aortic occlusion time.
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