Gosselin C, Labbé R, Douville Y, Noël H P
Service de Chirurgie Générale, Hôpital du Saint-Sacrement, Québec, Canada.
Ann Chir. 1991;45(9):774-7.
Despite technological improvement, surgery for ruptured aortic abdominal aneurysm (AAA) only gets about 50% of patients to survive past the operative period. This series addresses the long-term outcome of those survivors. Eighty consecutive patients operated on for ruptured AAA between January 1983 and June 1990 at l'hôpital du Saint-Sacrement by three vascular surgeons, were studied and compared to 279 patients submitted to elective aneurysm surgery during the same period. The operative mortalities were respectively of 45% (ruptured) and 6.1% (elective). Five year survivals added up to 30 and 68%. When the 5 year survivals were recalculated, including only patients who were discharged from hospital, we found no statistically significant difference (p greater than 0.05) between the ruptured (55%) and the elective groups (68%). Data from this series demonstrate that long-term survival of patients undergoing ruptured AAA surgery is good and compares with that of AAA elective surgery. Therefore, aggressive treatment of ruptured AAA remains justified.