Ruptured Aortic Aneurysm and Dissection Related Death: an Autopsy Database Analysis

Acute aortic catastrophes (AAC), mainly ruptured aneurysms and dissections, lead all other vascular conditions in morbidity and mortality, even if intervention occurs. The aim of our study was to give a descriptive overview of the demographic and pathological characteristics of AAC. Between 1994 and...

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Published in:Pathology oncology research Vol. 26; no. 4; pp. 2391 - 2399
Main Authors: Pál, Dániel, Szilágyi, Brigitta, Berczeli, Márton, Szalay, Csaba Imre, Sárdy, Balázs, Oláh, Zoltán, Székely, Tamás, Rácz, Gergely, Banga, Péter, Czinege, Zsófia, Sótonyi, Péter
Format: Journal Article
Language:English
Published: Dordrecht Springer Netherlands 01-10-2020
Springer Nature B.V
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Summary:Acute aortic catastrophes (AAC), mainly ruptured aneurysms and dissections, lead all other vascular conditions in morbidity and mortality, even if intervention occurs. The aim of our study was to give a descriptive overview of the demographic and pathological characteristics of AAC. Between 1994 and 2013, 80,469 autopsies were performed at Semmelweis University hospitals in Budapest. After collecting the autopsy reports we were able to create the AAC database upon which we conducted our analysis. We found 567 cases of AAC. The cause of death in 120 of them was classified as a non-ruptured aorta with malperfusion or distal embolization. Of the remaining 447 cases, in 305 the cause of death was a ruptured aortic aneurysm (rAA), and in 142 it was a ruptured aortic dissection (rAD). The distribution of rAA cases was 34.4% thoracal, 4.3% thoracoabdominal, and 61.3% abdominal. We found female dominance where the rAA was thoracal. In rAD cases, 84% were Stanford A and 16% Stanford B type. In both groups we found different pathological distributions. In the prehospital group, the number of thoracal ruptures was considerable. 88% of the patients with Stanford A dissection died in the prehospital or perioperative period. The most progressive AACs were ruptures of intrapericardial aneurysms and Stanford A dissections., however survival rate can be elevated by using rapid imaging examination and immediate surgical intervention. We want to highlight that our study contains such gender differences, which are worth to be taken into consideration.
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ISSN:1219-4956
1532-2807
DOI:10.1007/s12253-020-00835-x