Surgery
Thoracic or abdominal
aortic aneurysms that are large, causing symptoms, or
rapidly getting bigger are considered at risk of rupturing. Surgery is usually
recommended if any one of these factors is present. Your doctor will
consider:
- Whether you need urgent
surgery.
- Whether you will be able to withstand a major
surgery.
- Whether you can avoid surgery, at least for the
present.
When making a decision about surgery for an aortic
aneurysm, the benefits in relation to the risks of surgery must be considered,
as well as the risks of major surgery. People who are at significant risk from
surgery may elect to use medical management or another technique such as a
stent graft procedure.
Your doctor will closely monitor the size
and rate of growth of smaller aneurysms using
abdominal ultrasound,
computed tomography (CT) scan, or other imaging
tests.
Abdominal aortic aneurysms
In men, surgery is typically recommended for
abdominal aortic aneurysms
that are causing symptoms
or that are 5.5 cm or larger in diameter. In women, surgery may be recommended
for smaller aneurysms. Some doctors perform surgery when the aneurysm is
smaller, although the risk of rupture is considered low for aneurysms less than
5.5 cm in diameter.4, 5
Surgery is also recommended for small aneurysms that have grown more than
.5 cm within 6 months.
The decision to have surgery, delay
surgery, or not have surgery at all depends on other factors also. These
factors may include older age or medical problems that make surgery more
dangerous.
Surgical repair of aortic
aneurysms
Both traditional surgery and endovascular aortic
repair are used to treat aortic aneurysms. Talk to your doctor about which
surgery is best for you.
If you have surgery, your doctor will
make a large cut in your chest or belly. Then, your aneurysm will be removed
and the damaged portion of your blood vessel will be replaced with a man-made
graft.
Some aortic aneurysms can be
repaired without traditional surgery, using endovascular aortic repair. A tube
called a stent graft is inserted through an artery in the groin. The stent
graft makes a bridge between the healthy parts of the aorta (above and below
the aneurysm). Although this procedure works well right away, experts do not
know enough about its long-term effects. Because of this, you will need regular
X-rays or
CT scans for as long as you have the graft.
Thoracic aortic aneurysms
Your doctor
will recommend that you have surgery for a
thoracic
aortic aneurysm
based on the following guidelines:
- If the aneurysm is located where the
aorta
ascends up out of the heart, surgery is
recommended when it reaches 5.5 to 6.0 cm in diameter. - If the
aneurysm is located where the aorta begins to descend, surgery is recommended
when it reaches 6.0 cm in diameter.
- In those with
Marfan's syndrome, surgery is recommended when the
aneurysm reaches 5.5 cm in diameter.
- If the aneurysm causes
significant
aortic regurgitation, surgery is recommended.
Surgeons and institutions around the country have differing
experiences with aortic aneurysms and may follow different protocols in the
treatment of the disease. The most important factor to remember is that every
case is unique and complicated. You should work with your doctor to decide
which treatment is best for you.
If surgery is chosen, your
doctor will evaluate your overall health, including assessments of your heart,
lungs, and circulatory system, the kidneys, and the gastrointestinal system.
The decision whether to have surgery is based on the outcome of these
evaluations. The risk of death or injury during the operation increases if
other disease is present.
- If the evaluation of your heart indicates that
you have significant heart disease, you should undergo
coronary artery bypass surgery (CABG) or
coronary angioplasty prior to repairing an aortic
aneurysm. This is because coronary artery disease is the most important
underlying factor contributing to complications, such as
heart attack, in the period before and after the
operation. Other
complications, such as stroke and infection of the
graft, can also occur.
- Kidney disease,
chronic lung disease, and
cirrhosis of the liver may raise the risk of death and
complications during the operation.
- Smoking and
high blood pressure put a person at a higher risk for
complications from surgery. They are also risk factors for the rupture of an
abdominal aortic aneurysm.
It is not an option to wait until an aneurysm has ruptured
before surgery is done. Most people who have a ruptured aortic aneurysm die.
Surgery for a ruptured aneurysm is dangerous because of the large amount of
blood loss.