Muluk S C, Gertler J P, Brewster D C, Cambria R P, LaMuraglia G M, Moncure A C, Darling R C, Abbott W M
Department of Surgery, Massachusetts General Hospital, Harvard Medical School, Boston.
J Vasc Surg. 1994 Dec;20(6):880-6; discussion 887-8. doi: 10.1016/0741-5214(94)90224-0.
Although aortic aneurysm (AA) is primarily a disease of older age groups, younger (< 51 years) patients infrequently are admitted requiring AA surgery. We sought to compare the characteristics of these patients with those of a randomly selected group of older patients with AA.
We identified 26 patients with AA (group I) under age 51 (mean age 44.8) treated surgically between 1977 and 1993, after excluding patients with acute aortic dissection, traumatic pseudoaneurysms, and ascending or arch aneurysms, and compared them with 75 randomly selected patients with AA between the ages of 65 and 75 (mean age 70.3) who were surgically treated during the same time period (group II).
Prevalence of hypertension, diabetes, coexisting heart, kidney, or occlusive peripheral vascular disease was similar between the two groups, and familial aneurysm rates and sex distribution did not differ significantly. More patients in group I had symptoms at the time of presentation (46% vs 6.7%, p < 0.001), and they also had larger AAs (6.9 cm vs 6.0 cm, p = 0.01). Definable causes of aneurysmal disease, such as Takayasu's, Cogan's, and Marfan syndromes, were more common among the young patients (23% vs 0%, p = 0.01), but most (77%) young patients did not have an identifiable syndrome associated with their aneurysm disease. Group I had a marked shift toward proximal aneurysms, defined as involvement of juxtarenal, suprarenal, or thoracoabdominal aorta (46% vs 18% in group II, p < 0.01). This difference persisted even when aneurysms associated with the above syndromes were excluded from consideration (p = 0.02). Cigarette smoking was much more common among the young patients (83% vs 51% in group II, p < 0.01). Smoking in group II was associated with more extensive aneurysm disease (p = 0.04).
Aneurysmal disease presenting in the young adult is more likely to be symptomatic and associated with more proximal aortic involvement than aneurysmal disease in older patients. Smoking appears to play an important role in the pathogenesis of aneurysmal disease in the young patient and was associated in our study with more proximal aneurysms among older patients. A subgroup of patients at risk for early and aggressive aneurysm disease is suggested by these data.
虽然主动脉瘤(AA)主要是老年人群的疾病,但年轻(<51岁)患者很少因需行主动脉瘤手术而入院。我们试图比较这些患者与随机选取的老年主动脉瘤患者的特征。
我们确定了1977年至1993年间接受手术治疗的26例51岁以下的主动脉瘤患者(I组),排除急性主动脉夹层、创伤性假性动脉瘤以及升主动脉或主动脉弓动脉瘤患者后,将他们与同期接受手术治疗的75例年龄在65至75岁之间的随机选取的主动脉瘤患者(II组,平均年龄70.3岁)进行比较。
两组间高血压、糖尿病、并存的心脏、肾脏或闭塞性外周血管疾病的患病率相似,家族性动脉瘤发生率和性别分布无显著差异。I组更多患者在就诊时有症状(46%对6.7%,p<0.001),且他们的主动脉瘤也更大(6.9 cm对6.0 cm,p = 0.01)。可明确的动脉瘤病因,如高安氏病、科根氏病和马凡综合征,在年轻患者中更常见(23%对0%,p = 0.01),但大多数(77%)年轻患者没有与其动脉瘤疾病相关的可识别综合征。I组近端动脉瘤有明显增加,近端动脉瘤定义为累及肾周、肾上腺或胸腹主动脉(I组46%,II组18%,p<0.01)。即使排除与上述综合征相关的动脉瘤,这种差异仍然存在(p = 0.02)。年轻患者中吸烟更为常见(83%对II组的51%,p<0.0...