Methods: This retrospective study included 47 patients (35 males, 12 females) who were performed open repair for ruptured abdominal aortic aneurysms in our clinic between March 2005 and June 2013. Thoracic and hiatal clamping were performed in 26 (19 males, 7 females; mean age 68.5±8.0 years) and 21 (16 males, 5 females; mean age 66.1±7.8 years) patients, respectively. Postoperative complications and mortality were evaluated between the two groups by univariate and multivariate statistical analyses.
Results: Overall mortality was 36.7% (n=18) and there was no significant difference between the two groups. Univariate analyses showed no significant difference between the two groups in terms of postoperative respiratory complications (p=0.59), renal failure (p=0.98), the use of cell saver (p=0.26), and intestinal ischemia (p=0.08). Duration of hospital stay was longer in thoracic clamping group (p=0.01). Age and clamp time (>30 minutes) significantly increased hospital mortality.
Conclusion: Hiatal and thoracic clamping were not superior to each other when postoperative complications were compared in patients for whom infrarenal clamping was not feasible. Both techniques can be applied safely by keeping the cross-clamp time as short as possible.
Table 1: Preoperative variables
All patients were operated on in the supine position at a 30 degree angle facing right. We performed a median laparotomy and explored the aorta via a transperitoneal approach. We then performed the hiatal clamping by exploring the omentum minus in hemodynamically stable cases with aortic aneurysms that were unsuitable for infrarenal clamping. For the patients with hypotension, shock, and cardiac arrest and for those who had previously undergone abdominal surgery, we performed a left anterolateral thoracotomy and cross-clamped the descending aorta just above the diaphragm. In addition, we used tubular or Y-aortic bifurcation grafts made of either Dacron or polytetrafluoroethylene (PTFE). In 39 patients, the Medtronic, SEQUESTRA 1000 model Cell Saver® autotransfusion system (Medtronic, Texas, USA) was utilized after taking into account factors such as preoperative blood loss, the patients blood group, and the availability of this autotransfusion system.
Next, the respiratory, renal, intestinal, and cardiac complications were compared along with the need for re-exploration, in hospital mortality, the use of autotransfusion, the need for blood transfusion, and hospital stay duration between the thoracic and hiatal clamping groups.
Statistical methods
Statistical analyses were performed using the SPSS
version 15.0 for Windows software program (SPSS Inc.,
Chicago, IL, USA). The variables were investigated
using both visual (histograms and probability plots)
and analytical methods (Kolmogorov-Smirnov and
Shapiro-Wilk tests) to determinate whether or not
they were normally distributed. Descriptive analyses
were presented using mean ± standard deviation (SD)
for normally distributed variables and frequency
tables for categorical variables. In addition, the
descriptive analyses were presented using medians
and inter-quartile ranges (IQRs) for the nonnormally
distributed and ordinal variables. The
normally distributed variables were compared using
Students t-test, and the non-normally distributed
variables were compared using the Mann-Whitney
U test. Furthermore, the categorical variables were
compared using a chi-square or Fishers exact test,
and the overall mortality results were analyzed via
multivariant logistic regression. A p v alue o f l ess
than 0.05 was considered to be statistically significant
for these comparisons. The independent predictors
were analyzed by employing univariant logistic
regression to assess the cause of overall mortality,
and any variants with a value of p<0.20 (age, gender,
respiratory failure, intestinal ischemia, acute renal
failure, relapse, clamp duration, and hospital stay
duration) were analyzed using Spearmans correlation
test and the Akaike information criterion (AIC). The
variants that met the appropriate criteria were then
selected (age, clamp duration, and acute renal failure)
and were included in the new model, which was
analyzed via multivariant regression. The goodness of
fit of the new model was assessed using the Hosmer-
Lemeshow test.
There were also no statistically significant differences in the operative parameters such as the need for transfusion, the use of tubular or Y-aortic bifurcation grafts, clamp duration, the amount of blood collected by the autotransfusion system, and intestinal ischemia (Table 2).
Table 2: Operative and postoperative variables
Moreover, a postoperative evaluation of the data revealed no statistically significant differences with regard to respiratory failure, acute renal failure, or re-exploration. However, the hospital stay duration was longer in the thoracic clamping group (p<0.01) (Table 2).
Furthermore, we also assessed the clamp duration and age as a predictor of overall mortality (Table 3).
Table 3: Preoperative and intraoperative variables affecting mortality
Research has been conducted on multiple factors that affect mortality and morbidity in surgery for rAAAs. In a study made up of 229 rAAA cases, Marković et al.[14] determined that high mortality was related to preoperative hypotension, shock, renal failure, hemorrhage, the excessive need for transfusion, and the use of aortobifemoral grafts. In our study, we found no relationship between mortality and the clamp site; however, age and clamp duration did have a significant effect (Table 2). Sasaki et al.[15] reported that when suprarenal clamping lasts longer than 30 minutes, it significantly increases the risk of postoperative renal failure. Thus, renal protection should be performed to avoid this complication. In our study, there were no significant differences between the clamp duration in the two groups, and we also observed that a clamp duration of longer than 30 minutes increased the mortality rate (Table 2). Severe hypotension, hypovolemic shock, and previous abdominal surgery are factors which may complicate hiatal exploration; therefore, thoracic clamping can be performed in those cases. Additionally, some studies have observed that thoracic clamping may cause respiratory and intestinal complications.[10,16] In their study of 102 cases, Islamoglu et al.[17] found that mortality, the need for a blood transfusion, and respiratory and intestinal complications were significantly higher when thoracic clamping was performed rather than hiatal clamping. However, we observed no significant differences between the hiatal and thoracic clamping groups in our study, except that the hospital stay duration was significantly longer in the thoracic clamping group (p=0.01). In another study by Islamoglu at al.[18] that involved 61 rAAA cases, 32 of the patients did not survive, and four of these deaths (8%) occurred in the hiatal and infrarenal clamping groups. They also determined that preoperative unstable hemodynamics, prolonged clamp duration, and postoperative renal failure were related to the increased mortality in their study. Additionally, they reported that postoperative respiratory complications, the need for a blood transfusion, and hospital stay duration were significantly higher in the hiatal clamping group than in the infrarenal clamping group. Moreover, Fedakar et al.[19] determined that the in hospital mortality rate for patients with rAAAs was 52%, but in our study, this rate was only 36.7%.
Declaration of conflicting interests
The authors declared no conflicts of interest with
respect to the authorship and/or publication of this
article.
Funding
The authors received no financial support for the
research and/or authorship of this article.
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