Aortic replacement for thoraco-abdominal aneurysms remains a major challenge in vascular surgery. Related symptoms, maximal diameter > 6 cm, progression, aneurysm sac containing none or excentric thrombi and uncontrollable hypertension are factors in favour of surgery, if the general condition of the patient allows the operation. Patients with aneurysms < 5 cm maximal diameter, tube-size aneurysms, heavy calcification of the aortic wall, concentric thrombi within the aneurysmal sac and significant cardiopulmonary risks should be treated conservatively. Patients in good general condition with aneurysms around 5 cm maximal diameter should be controlled by computed tomography in 6 to 12 months intervals and in the case of progression surgery can be recommended despite missing symptoms. Crawford developed the 'graft-inclusion-technique', which combines the 'ingraft'-technique with reattachment of renal, visceral and segmental arteries. The 'clamp and repair' principle is used in patients with sufficient cardiac function. Otherwise shunt or left sided heart bypass are used to reduce cardiac afterload. According to the literature local cooling (flush perfusion), cytoprotective drugs and numerous methods to maintain or ameliorate distal aortic perfusion during clamping ischemia have been used in patients successfully for prevention of ischemic spinal complications. In physiological settings these methods may prove valuable, but under pathophysiological conditions of TAAA-repair one must doubt the efficacy, because the individual risk is difficult to assess. In our hands flush perfusion and cooling of the kidneys proved to be helpful. In animal experiments we have shown prolongation of ischemia tolerance time using eicosanoides to protect the kidneys and the spinal cord. If shunt or left-sided heart bypass can protect the spinal cord during clamping, is unknown, because the risk of paraplegia in the individual patient can be known only, if the function of the spinal cord is monitored. We have developed a spinal neuromonitoring system and found, that only one third of all TAAA-patients is at high risk to develop paraplegia during aortic clamping. The surgeon is guided by continuous recording of spinal evoked somatosensory potentials and can adapt the operative technique by early reimplantation and eventually subsequent separate reimplantation of segmental arteries supplying blood to the spinal cord, in order to reduce spinal ischemia time. Our results in 260 TAAA-patients are presented. In a high-risk population of patients with aneurysms type I-III (Crawford's classification) it was possible, to reduce the paraplegia rate from 7 to 3.5%, the risk of paraparesis from 15 to 6%, while the operative mortality was only reduced from 19 to 10%.
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