Arar, Makbule CavidanSezen, Ü.Yüksek, A.Sarıkaya, H.Turan, F.Turan, C.Mordeniz, C.Baran, O.Günkaya, M.Gür, O.Saraçoğlu Varol, Gamze2022-05-112022-05-1120151305-5550https://doi.org/10.5222/GKDAD.2015.095https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11776/8064Objective: Anesthesia for the repair of abdominal aortic aneurism can be performed with different modalities of anesthesia or their combinations. The risk level for the morbidity and mortality of the patients, is increased in geriatric patients with the existence of accompanying pathology. To compare two different anesthesia methods (local anesthesia and sedation vs combined spinal and epidural anesthesia) for the repair of endovascular aneurism in a geriatric patient. Material and Methods: 16 high risk geriatric patients were included in the study. The parameters of 16 high risk patients who underwent elective or emergency treatment for endovascular aneurism were included. Group-I (n:8) was given local anesthesia and sedation, Group-II (n:8) was given combined spinal and epidural anesthesia. Intraoperative and postoperative hemodynamic parameters were reviewed and analyzed. The demographic data of the two groups ressembled each other. Results: The complication rate was calculated at an average of 6.25%, which was considered insignifcant (p>0.05). There was no signifcant difference between the duration of hospital and intensive care unit stay for the two groups (p>0.05). Conclusion: Combined spinal and epidural anesthesia requires much more experience, but it is safer than local anesthesia and sedation for endovascular aneurism patients.en10.5222/GKDAD.2015.095info:eu-repo/semantics/closedAccessAbdominal aort aneurismCombined spinal epidurally anesthesiaEndovasculary surgeryHigh cardiac riskLocal anesthesiabupivacainefentanyllocal anesthetic agentmidazolamabdominal aorta aneurysmagedanalgesiaArticleclinical articlecontrolled studydemographyelective surgeryemergency treatmentendovascular aneurysm repairepidural anesthesiafemalegeriatric patienthemodynamic parametershigh risk patienthospitalizationhumanintensive care unitintraoperative periodlocal anesthesiamalepostoperative complicationpostoperative periodsedationspinal anesthesiaCombined spinal-epidural anesthesia or local anesthesia + Sedoanalgesia in abdominal aortic Aneurism Repair?Article212951002-s2.0-84936802076N/A