Ruptured AAAs are larger in diameter and have a greater volume of thrombus compared with intact AAAs. However, there was no difference in the thrombus volume/aneurysm volume ratio in the two groups. In both intact and ruptured AAA groups, the thrombus was usually anterior and eccentric.
Ten percent of patients required a shunt placement during CEA under CBA. Shunt placement was necessary in 56.8% of patients with SP less than 40 mm Hg. EEG identified cerebral ischemia in only 59.4% of patients needing shunt placement, with a false-positive rate of 1.0% and a false-negative rate of 40.6%. Both SP and EEG as a guide to shunt placement have poor sensitivity. Intraoperative monitoring of the awake patients under regional anesthesia (CBA) is the most sensitive and specific method to identify patients requiring shunt placement.
Increased ILASP results in corresponding increase in ITASP, and increased AAA size is associated with increased thrombus volume. However, neither thrombus volume nor AAA size has any relationship to ITASP.
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