
Small incisions
fix big problems:
Endovascular
aneurysm repair quickly returns patient to his workshop
Houston,
Texas, January 15, 2005 – Joel Laws learned about his
life-threatening aortic
aneurysm the way most patients do – by
seeking treatment for some other problem.
Last summer,
Laws went to a Longview hospital when he felt pain in his side.
Doctors ordered
a computed
tomography (CT) scan to see if complications had arisen
from recent gallbladder surgery. Instead, they found a large aneurysm.
An aneurysm
is a ballooning of an artery that weakens the blood vessel’s
walls. Ruptured aortic aneurysms kill some 15,000 Americans each year, making
them one of the top 20 leading causes of death.
“It looked
like a big old orange, all puffed up,” recalled Laws,
an active East Texas retiree. At 82, his age is typical for aneurysm patients.
An estimated 3 to 4 percent of people over age 65 have them.
Some patients
may experience shortness of breath or pain in the back or neck,
but most have no symptoms at all until the aneurysm ruptures.
The condition
can be treated if discovered in advance, but as in Laws’ case,
aneurysms often are found when patients undergo CT scans or magnetic
resonance imaging
(MRI)
tests for other reasons. More than 100,000 are diagnosed before rupture
each year.
The larger an
aortic aneurysm grows, the more likely it will burst and cause
massive, often fatal internal bleeding. Doctors recommend
surgery
when aneurysms
reach 5 to 6 centimeters in diameter. Traditional surgery replaces
the affected segment of the aorta with a prosthetic graft.
With
a mechanical valve in his heart and borderline emphysema, Laws
was not a good candidate for general anesthesia and invasive
surgery. Instead,
his
doctors
suggested a minimally invasive procedure known as EVAR, or endovascular
aortic aneurysm repair, and sent him to Memorial
Hermann Hospital.
Ali Azizzadeh,
M.D., joined Memorial Hermann’s team in August
from the Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis. “We
offer the full spectrum of vascular diagnostic and therapeutic
procedures,” said Azizzadeh,
who serves as medical director of Memorial Hermann’s vascular
laboratory and assistant professor in the department of cardiothoracic
and vascular surgery
at The University of Texas Medical School at Houston. In addition
to aneurysm repair, Dr. Azizzadeh and his team manage blockages
of arteries that feed the
brain, kidneys and legs.
Laws remained
conscious under local anesthesia as Dr. Azizzadeh performed the
procedure. After making small incisions
in the groin,
the surgical
team threaded
catheters through the femoral arteries and into the aorta, where
they placed a fabric-covered metal stent. Channeling blood flow
through the stent relieves
pressure on the ballooned artery, preventing a rupture.
“We can
offer endovascular repair as an alternative to open surgery to
all patients with suitable anatomy,” explained Dr. Azizzadeh. “Newer
generation devices have expanded the application of endovascular
repair.” For
patients, like Laws, with other medical problems, EVAR is the
only option.
The stakes are
high when treating the body’s
most vital blood vessel, so doctors don’t recommend any procedure
until the risk of rupture exceeds the surgical risks. In fewer
than 5 percent of EVAR cases, complications arise
that require a shift to traditional, open surgery. To accommodate
such cases, Memorial Hermann Hospital is outfitting surgical suites
with catheterization
equipment, permitting the endovascular doctors to perform both
surgeries in the same room.
“We weigh
the risks and benefits of both open and endovascular approaches
for each patient. Most patients these days are selecting
less invasive treatments. Patients who undergo endovascular repair
require life-long surveillance imaging
studies with CT scanning, MRI, or ultrasound,” said
Dr. Azizzadeh.
A recent British
study showed the 30-day post-operative mortality rate for EVAR
to be two thirds
lower than for
open surgery,
and EVAR patients
typically
recover
much more quickly than those who have traditional surgery.
Laws
befriended another patient with multiple aneurysms who underwent
the traditional surgery about the same
time Laws
had the endovascular
procedure. “I went
home before he did,” Laws said. Because of his
other health problems, Laws spent a week in the hospital
after EVAR, but most patients check out within a
couple of days.
Back home in
Hallsville, Laws was soon busy again building birdhouses in his
workshop and
tending his vegetable
garden. “I do anything I want to do,” Laws
said. “I feel good.”
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