Aneurysmal dilatation of saphenous vein graft (SVG), first reported in 1975, is secondary to true aneurysm or pseudoaneurysm. We report 1 case and review 107 cases published since 1975. Severe SVG dilatations are large (6 ± 3 cm), occur remote from surgery (12 ± 4 years) and are life threatening, with 15.7% in-hospital mortality. Symptoms are nonspecific and the abnormality is initially observed by chest X-ray in 57% of cases. The chest X-ray abnormalities have a distinctive appearance that may suggest both diagnosis and which SVG is involved. Diagnosis is made clinically by imaging, i.e. computed tomography, echocardiography, magnetic resonance and/or surgical observation (66 cases), or most accurately by tissue evaluation by the pathologist (42 cases). Aneurysm is more common than pseudoaneurysm by a 6:1 ratio.
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