• Most Popular
  • Most Shared

Health Videos

Leeches therapy industry booms

As leech therapy gains popularity, a laboratory near Moscow is boosting production of this increasingly valuable -- and slimy -- commodity.  Video 

Under the knife, without the knife

Autopsies have gone virtual thanks to Swiss forensic pathologists who are conducting about 100 ''virtopsies'' a year.  Video 

Aneurysm repair: less invasive approach better

CHICAGO
Thu Jan 31, 2008 3:05pm EST

CHICAGO (Reuters) - A less-invasive way to repair a dangerous bulge in the body's main artery may be the best choice for many people, U.S. researchers said on Wednesday.

Health

A large study found the newer technique, known as endovascular repair, had lower short-term rates of death and complication than an older, more-invasive surgery.

And while it had more long-term complications than the older surgery, these were easier to treat than those that arose with the more older, surgical approach.

"I do these all of the time. This makes me feel even better about recommending endovascular repair for patients with the appropriate anatomy," said Dr. Marc Schermerhorn of Harvard Medical School and Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center, whose study appears in the New England Journal of Medicine.

About four out of every 100 adults develop an abdominal aortic aneurysm, in which the vessel that supplies blood to abdomen, legs and pelvis swells to more than one and a half times its normal size.

A ruptured abdominal aortic aneurysm is the 10th leading cause of death in men over age 55 in the United States. Fewer than 20 percent of people survive a rupture.

Doctors have traditionally repaired the weakened vessel using open surgery involving a long incision in the torso. Surgeons then sew on a patch or graft to reinforce the aorta.

In endovascular repair, doctors deliver the graft through a catheter inserted into a small incision in the groin which is threaded through the body. Recovery time is much shorter, but the grafts have been shown to be less durable.

Schermerhorn's team looked at more than 45,000 patients enrolled in Medicare who had been treated for an abdominal aortic aneurysm. About half had open surgery and the other half had the less-invasive procedure.

Nearly 5 percent of people who had open surgery died right afterward, compared with 1.2 percent of the patients who underwent endovascular repair.

Schermerhorn said 9 percent of the endovascular repair group needed repeat procedures compared with 1.7 percent of the open surgery group.

But because the open surgery is a much more invasive procedure, complications needing surgery were more than twice as high four years after the procedure for open repair patients.

"You are not free from intervention with open surgery," Schermerhorn said.

After weighing all the risks and benefits, he said the endovascular repair appears to be the better choice.

(Editing by Will Dunham and Cynthia Osterman)



More from Reuters

Photo

Plot exposes fissure in U.S. intelligence community

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Last week's failed plot to bomb a U.S. passenger jet has exposed lingering fissures within the U.S. intelligence community, which had information from interviews and clandestine intercepts but did not put the pieces together, officials said.

Floor traders work at the Hong Kong Stocks Exchange, January 16, 2008.   REUTERS/Bobby Yip

My way or the highway?

Hong Kong is poised to accept Beijing's accounting standards. That's good. The system, though, is prone to scandal. That's bad.  Full Article 

People walk past a branch of Bank of America in New York's financial district April 28, 2009. REUTERS/Brendan McDermid

Move your money

Boycotting "too big to fail" banks is a great idea -- so long as investors remember that banks aren't the only ones responsible for the crisis.  Full Article