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Aortocava fistula: experience with five patients.

Combined injuries of the aorta and inferior vena cava are rare. Mortality is over 70%, primarily from exsanguinating hemorrhage. Post-traumatic aortocava fistula can develop in survivors, who present in the postoperative period with manifestations of high output heart failure. This is a retrospective review of five male patients, age from 9 to 39 years, with aortocava fistulas that were referred with congestive heart failure, 2 days to 6 months after abdominal penetrating injuries. They had undergone surgery at another hospital and several organ injuries were treated. Retroperitoneal hematomas were not seen or were seen and left undisturbed. Four patients received a gunshot injury, had the fistula at the infrarenal level, and survived surgical repair. In one of the survivors, a left popliteal artery bullet embolism also occurred and was treated. Another patient sustained a thoracoabdominal stab injury and an aortocava fistula developed at the suprarenal level; he was in severe congestive heart failure and died during surgery. There are very few reports on this sequelae of vascular injuries at the abdominal level. Patients with aortic and cava injuries have a high mortality rate and arteriovenous fistula may develop with communicating pseudoaneurysms. If high output heart failure develops in a patient with a history of abdominal penetrating injury, an arteriovenous fistula must be suspected and arteriography will disclose the location of the fistula. Surgical treatment is necessary to prevent further heart damage. In the future endovascular procedures may have a role in the management of these difficult conditions.

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