ObjectiveThis study aims to assess the clinical results of endovascular intervention for spontaneous isolated superior mesenteric artery dissection (SISMAD) and its impact on superior mesenteric artery (SMA) remodeling in comparison to solely medical management. MethodsAll patients with SISMAD between January 2015 and August 2023 were included. The primary endpoints were the absence of major adverse events (MAEs), including dissection-related mortality, recurrence of mesenteric ischemia symptoms, and the necessity for intervention. The secondary endpoints were stenosis or occlusion of the SMA and morphologic remodeling of the dissections. ResultsA total of 217 SISMAD patients were included. In this study, 127 (58.5 %) patients received medical management alone (conservative group), and 90 (41.5 %) underwent endovascular therapy (EVT group). In the EVT group, the technical success rate was 94.4 % (85/90). During follow-up, 13 (6.0 %) patients experienced MAEs, and 1 patient in the conservative group death related to SISMAD. The patients in EVT group showed more complete remodeling than those in the conservative group (76 (84.4 %) vs 66 (52.0 %), P < .0001). Survival analysis showed that the estimated MAEs-free survival rates were97.8 %, 95.6 %, and 95.6 % in EVT group and 98.4 %, 94.5 %, 92.9 % in conservative group at one, two, and three years, respectively. No significant difference was observed in both groups. ConclusionThe findings indicate that both endovascular treatment and medical management alone yield comparable rates of MAE-free survival among patients with SISMAD. Additionally, endovascular therapy exhibits a higher rate of complete remodeling and greater freedom from stenosis or occlusion of the SMA.