WHAT THIS PAPER ADDSThere is no universally accepted aortic graft infection case definition and clinical approaches to this complex condition differ widely with variable outcomes. Here, the Management of Aortic Graft Infection Collaboration (MAGIC), involving clinicians from several English hospital National Health Service Trusts with large vascular services, propose a formal case definition, derived by a process of multidisciplinary, expert consensus. The definition is readily applied in routine practice and aids early recognition. Importantly and towards development of evidence-based clinical guidelines that are presently lacking, it provides a consistent diagnostic standard, essential for clinical trial design and meaningful comparison between diagnostic and therapeutic strategies.Objective/Background: The management of aortic graft infection (AGI) is highly complex and in the absence of a universally accepted case definition and evidence-based guidelines, clinical approaches and outcomes vary widely. The objective was to define precise criteria for diagnosing AGI. Methods: A process of expert review and consensus, involving formal collaboration between vascular surgeons, infection specialists, and radiologists from several English National Health Service hospital Trusts with large vascular services (Management of Aortic Graft Infection Collaboration [MAGIC]), produced the definition. Results: Diagnostic criteria from three categories were classified as major or minor. It is proposed that AGI should be suspected if a single major criterion or two or more minor criteria from different categories are present. AGI is diagnosed if there is one major plus any criterion (major or minor) from another category. (i) Clinical/surgical major criteria comprise intraoperative identification of pus around a graft and situations where direct communication between the prosthesis and a nonsterile site exists, including fistulae, exposed grafts in open wounds, and deployment of an endovascular stentgraft into an infected field (e.g., mycotic aneurysm); minor criteria are localized AGI features or fever 38 C, where AGI is the most likely cause. (ii) Radiological major criteria comprise increasing perigraft gas volume on serial computed tomography (CT) imaging or perigraft gas or fluid ( 7 weeks and 3 months, respectively) postimplantation; minor criteria include other CT features or evidence from alternative imaging techniques. (iii) Laboratory major criteria comprise isolation of microorganisms from percutaneous aspirates of perigraft fluid, explanted grafts, and other intraoperative specimens; minor criteria are positive blood cultures or elevated inflammatory indices with no alternative source. Conclusion: This AGI definition potentially offers a practical and consistent diagnostic standard, essential for comparing clinical management strategies, trial design, and developing evidence-based guidelines. It requires validation that is planned in a multicenter, clinical service database
Women with AAAs are older and have a higher frequency of cardiovascular risk factors than men. Women rupture AAAs with a greater frequency than men at all size intervals and have a fourfold increased frequency of rupture at <5.5 cm. No differences in surgical mortality between women and men were found. Current practice guidelines for elective AAA operative intervention should be reconsidered and stratified by gender.
Controlled release of microgram quantities of VEGF significantly enhanced neovascularization and vascular perfusion in ischemic limbs compared with controls in this rabbit model of partial ischemia. In addition, VEGF-treated ischemic limbs demonstrated near-normal function and appearance, whereas NTG- and saline-treated ischemic controls remained noticeably impaired. This novel approach of VEGF delivery may prove clinically useful either alone or combined with revascularization procedures.
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