Recommendations for management of infected aortic pathology based on current evidence

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Abstract

The management of infection involving the abdominal aorta requires clinical decisions based on patient factors and the nature of the infectious process. Any infection occurring after endovascular aortic aneurysm repair or open aortic replacement grafting should be treated promptly with appropriate systemic antibiotic therapy. Once a vascular prosthesis becomes infected, surgical treatment is necessary. There should be a low threshold for graft excision and extra-anatomic bypass in the presence of fistula or abscess cavity, when feasible entire graft should be excised. In selected patients, graft excision with in situ aorta reconstruction is an appropriate option using an autogenous femoral vein, cryopreserved allograft, or a prosthetic graft impregnated with antibiotic. The replaced in situ aortic graft should be covered with an omental pedicle. For primary aortic graft infections, endovascular treatment may act as a bridge to more definitive treatment; or, in the absence of gross retroperitoneal infections, endovascular grafting alone with prolonged systemic antibiotic therapy is a viable option, particularly in patients not fit for open surgical procedures.

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Stenson, K. M., Grima, M. J., Loftus, I. M., & Tripathi, R. K. (2019). Recommendations for management of infected aortic pathology based on current evidence. Seminars in Vascular Surgery, 32(1–2), 68–72. https://doi.org/10.1053/j.semvascsurg.2019.07.003

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