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Comparative Study
. 1979 Feb;137(2):240-3.
doi: 10.1016/0002-9610(79)90154-5.

Aortic dissection: surgical and nonsurgical treatments compared. An analysis of seventy-four cases at the University of Virginia

Comparative Study

Aortic dissection: surgical and nonsurgical treatments compared. An analysis of seventy-four cases at the University of Virginia

S E Mills et al. Am J Surg. 1979 Feb.

Abstract

During the eleven year period from 1965 to 1976, aortic dissection was diagnosed in seventy-eight patients treated at the University of Virginia Medical Center. The seventy-four cases that comprise the present report were confirmed by aortography, surgery, or autopsy. Forty patients (54 per cent) were surgically treated by interruption of the origin of dissection and insertion of a Dacron prosthesis. The remaining thirty-four (46 per cent) were treated according to the Wheat regimen or by nonspecific supportive measures. The overall survival at one year was 28 per cent. One year survival for patients with type I dissections treated surgically was 19 per cent compared with 8 per cent one year survival for nonsurgically treated patients. Sixty per cent of patients with type II dissections treated surgically were alive at the end of one year, whereas no patients with type II dissection treated nonsurgically survived beyond one year. Half the patients with type III dissections treated surgically were alive at one year compared with 35 per cent of those nonsurgically treated. These data suggest that surgery is the treatment of choice for all types of aortic dissections, but particularly for type II. Patients with type I dissections have a very poor prognosis regardless of therapy.

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