Popliteal aneurysms: current management and outcome
- PMID: 10479852
Popliteal aneurysms: current management and outcome
Abstract
Background: Peripheral artery aneurysm is the most common peripheral arterial aneurysm. Clinical pictures, perioperative diagnostic evaluations, surgical treatment and results are described.
Methods: From January 1982 to September 1998, 65 popliteal aneurysms in 48 patients were treated in the Department of Vascular Surgery of Busto Arsizio Hospital. The series comprises 44 men (91.7%) and 4 women (8.3%) with mean age 65 years (range 44 to 87 years). At the time of surgery, 38 of the 65 aneurysms (58%) were treated because symptomatic: 31 (82%) for limb ischemia (17 for acute ischemia, 14 for chronic ischemia), 6 (16%) for compression on the adjacent popliteal vein and 1 (2%) for rupture. Forty-seven (72.3%) aneurysms were treated electively: 27 cases were asymptomatic and 20 others had chronic leg ischemia or compression on the popliteal vein. The operations performed are listed as follows: 1 primary limb amputation for irreversible ischemia, 1 lumbar sympathicectomy and 62 leg limb revascularizations with graft interposition (vein or synthetic prosthesis). The patient with aneurysmal rupture underwent leg amputation.
Results: Mean follow-up is 6.5 years (ranging from 2 months to 10 years) and revealed important differences between symptomatic versus asymptomatic patients in limb salvage and graft patency: inferential analysis of amputation incidence is significant for p < 0.01 (Fisher exact test).
Conclusions: We think that surgery is the best treatment also for small popliteal aneurysms, because of their frequent complications.
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