Annals of vascular surgery
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The management of traumatic injury of the common carotid artery has traditionally required a conventional surgical intervention, which is associated with a high mortality rate. Endovascular procedures might offer a less invasive alternative to treat these injuries, with a lower rate of mortality and morbidity. ⋯ A self-expanding covered stent was placed across the injured portion of the artery, resulting in thrombosis of the aneurysm and preservation of the parent artery, without any significant complication. Covered stent placement is an alternative approach to treating carotid artery pseudoaneurysms associated with a jugular-carotid fistula.
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In France, in the next 10 years, a large number of vascular surgeons will retire, and the risk of them not being replaced has raised the question of our capability to predict future activity in this discipline. Otherwise, the French population is expanding and aging. It will increase by 2.7% in 2020, and the number of individuals aged >65 years is expected to increase by 3.3 million, which represents a 33% rise between 2005 and 2020. As the number of vascular surgery procedures is closely associated with aging population, we can expect a significant increase in vascular surgery workload. We present a model to predict changes in vascular surgery activity according to population aging, including other parameters that could affect workload evolution. ⋯ In addition to the replacement of numerous retired surgeons, aging population and other factors could result in a significant increase in the demand for vascular surgical services.