• Annals of surgery · Jul 1991

    Management and long-term outcome of aortic dissection.

    • D D Glower, R H Speier, W D White, L R Smith, J S Rankin, and W G Wolfe.
    • Department of Surgery, Duke University Medical Center, Durham, North Carolina 27710.
    • Ann. Surg. 1991 Jul 1; 214 (1): 314131-41.

    AbstractAll 163 patients admitted to one institution between 1975 and 1988 with aortic dissection were reviewed. Type I and type II patients received grafting of the ascending aorta, with an intraoperative mortality rate of 11%. For type III dissection, management was medical in 53 patients, while 19 required surgery for aortic rupture or expansion, with an intraoperative mortality rate of 11%. The 9- or 10-year survival rates were 29%, 46%, and 29% for types I, II, and III respectively. Of 135 patients with primary aortic dissection, 17 (13%) required subsequent aortic surgery. Cause of late death was other cardiovascular disease in 38%, rupture of another aortic segment in 18%, sudden death in 24%, and other medical conditions in 21%. Although operative therapy for types I and II dissections and reserving operation for selected type III dissections provides acceptable long-term survival, careful follow-up is necessary due to concurrent cardiovascular disease and residual aortic disease.

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