Popliteal Artery Aneurysm : Epidemiology, Surgical Management and Outcome

Sammanfattning: Even if popliteal artery aneurysm (PAA) is the most common peripheral aneurysm, no single surgeon or institution has enough patients to study this disease with appropriate scientific methods, and no population-based investigation exists. PAA epidemiology, treatment, management, and outcome were studied in a population-based study of 571 patients (717 legs) primarily operated on for PAAs and 100 episodes of preoperative thrombolysis in Sweden between 1987 and 2002. Patients were identified in the Swedish Vascular Registry and case-records were reviewed. Information on amputation and survival was obtained for all patients, and 190 patients were re-examined with ultrasound, after mean 7.2 years (range 2-18)Median age was 71 years; 5.8% were women. Patients with unilateral PAA had AAA in 28%, increasing to 38% when PAAs were bilateral. Crude survival was 91.4% at one and 70% at five years, significantly lower than among age and sex matched controls. The cumulative incidence for operation of PAA in Sweden was estimated to 8.3/million person year. One-year amputation-rate was 8.8 %, increasing to 11% after follow-up (7.2 years). Independent risk factors for amputation within one year were poor run-off, age, emergency procedure, and prosthetic graft. Run-off was improved by preoperative thrombolysis among 87% of legs, when acute ischemia. After surgical repair with a medial approach the risk of late expansion of the aneurysm was 33%, with a posterior approach 8% , p=0.014. Among 190 re-examined patients, 108 (57%) had at least one additional aneurysm at index-operation, increasing to 131 (68%) at re-examination, the total number of aneurysms increasing by 42% (from 244 to 346).Conclusions: Multiple aneurysms are common among patients operated on for PAA. Preoperative thrombolysis improves run-off and decreases the amputation-rate in PAAs with acute ischemia. Vein grafts do better than prosthetic grafts, especially when a long bypass is needed. Posterior approach, when possible, reduces the risk of late expansion. A complete examination of the aorto-iliac and femoro-popliteal arteries is warranted at the time of surgery. All patients should be kept under life-long surveillance in order to detect and treat newly developed aneurysms timely. Normal arterial segments should be re-examined after three years.

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