AI Article Synopsis

  • The study aimed to compare patients with multiple arterial aneurysms to those with single aneurysms, focusing on factors like age, sex, and location of the aneurysms.
  • Out of 3107 patients reviewed, 2189 were included, with 143 having multiple aneurysms and a significant difference in average age at diagnosis between the two groups.
  • Findings revealed that patients with multiple aneurysms were generally younger and had different common locations for their aneurysms, confirmed by a follow-up study at another institution.

Article Abstract

The aim of this retrospective cross-sectional observational study was to determine differences of patients with multiple arterial aneurysms to patients with single arterial aneurysms. Patients with the diagnosis of an arterial aneurysm from January 2006 to January 2016 in the department of vascular surgery Heidelberg were investigated. Excluded were patients with hereditary disorders of connective tissue or systemic inflammatory disease, as well as other arterial pathologies than true aneurysms. Patients with multiple aneurysms (defined by at least four aneurysms) were compared to patients with single aneurysms concerning age at initial diagnosis, sex and affected arterial site. To verify the findings, a replication of the study was performed at a comparable institution. Of 3107 patients with arterial aneurysms, 918 were excluded. Of the resulting 2189 patients, 1238 (56.6%) patients had a single, 808 (36.9%) two or three, and 143 (6.5%) at least four aneurysms (group ). Nine hundred seventy-two patients (44.4%) had a single abdominal aortic aneurysm (group ). Age at initial diagnosis differed between (66.7±9.5 y) and (69.1±8.6 y) (p=0.0338). Within , 138 patients (96.5%) were male, compared with 865 patients (89.0%) in (p=0.0041). The most frequent aneurysm localization shifted from the abdominal aorta and its branches in patients with a single aneurysm (n=1029; 83.1%) to pelvic and leg arteries in patients with at least four aneurysms (n=318; 63.2%). The replication of the study at the department of vascular surgery Frankfurt confirmed the younger age at initial diagnosis in (67.3±12.5 y) compared to (70.9±9.6 y) (p=0.0259) and the distribution shift toward the arteries below the aortic bifurcation in Patients with multiple aneurysms are younger at initial diagnosis and differ concerning aneurysm localization compared to patients with a single aneurysm.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1024/0301-1526/a001050DOI Listing

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