Do I need prompt surgery for a 5.2 cm AAA or a second opinion?

Posted by rel1203 @rel1203, 6 days ago

I am a 60 yr old female seeing a specialist for a rapid growing 5.2cm AAA. I was told I was having surgery then he changed his mind and now the receptionist tells me he isn't in any rush to fix it. I am getting dull pains on and off in my stomach and across my back. I am very anxious! I am starting to think I need a second opinion as I don't won't this thing to rupture. Any advice would be appreciated

Interested in more discussions like this? Go to the Aortic Aneurysms Support Group.

Profile picture for moonboy @moonboy

Not be be overly dramatic, but when I hear someone has reached the 6-centimeter mark, I go right back to my own moment in 2015 when my aorta tore open without warning. I remember feeling the unmistakable sense that something catastrophic had happened inside my chest, and within seconds I was on the pavement outside my hotel, waiting to be found. I survived because a team that handles these cases every day got hold of me fast at UCSD La Jolla. That matters more than people realize.

For an ascending aortic aneurysm at 6 cm, this is the point where acting quickly is the safest path. You don’t have to panic, but you shouldn’t sit on it. You want a center or surgeon who deals with complex aortic repairs routinely, not someone who does them occasionally. High-volume aortic programs—major academic centers or specialty aortic institutes—have the experience, the imaging precision, and the post-op protocols that give you the best margin of safety.

Local vascular surgeons can be excellent, but what saved me was being in the hands of a team that treats these problems all the time. When the aorta is involved, experience isn’t a luxury. It’s the difference between controlled repair and crisis. Yes, act quickly. Get evaluated at a specialty hospital. Let the people who live and breathe this work lay out your options. Knowing what’s happening inside you gives you power over it, and you’re catching this before it announces itself the way mine did. Peace.

Jump to this post

@moonboy thanks you for your input. very helpful! Acronyms strike again. I guess AAA could mean abdominal or ascending but either way, good advice - thank you

REPLY

I just got done with surgery to repair a 6.3cm AAA ABDOMINAL!
My surgeon says the cut off for surgery is 5.3cm.
My procedure was an EVAR non-evasive surgery.
If your close to the cut off point, contact a surgeon ASAP!
Be safe & my prayers are with you 🙏

REPLY
Profile picture for jrcollins999 @jrcollins999

@moonboy thanks you for your input. very helpful! Acronyms strike again. I guess AAA could mean abdominal or ascending but either way, good advice - thank you

Jump to this post

@jrcollins999 yeah it’s super important that you figure out whether or not it’s an ascending aortic aneurysm or an abdominal aortic aneurysm. They’re treated very differently. Peace.

REPLY

@martinkennot Is my HERO. In the category of only take advice from a survivor or a thoracic aortic surgical specialist at a major medical center….Peace down under Martin!

REPLY
Profile picture for jrcollins999 @jrcollins999

@martinkennot did you have an abdominal aortic aneurysm or an ascending aortic aneurysm? Wow! It is amazing you survived! Your wife saved your life. You were at 6.5cm and it dissected? I am at 6.2cm and am hoping I can get surgery scheduled ASAP once I meet with the surgeon. I have the abdominal variety.....

Jump to this post

@jrcollins999 yes my wife is my hero. Thankfully she is more stubborn than me. And I was in my late 50s two years ago.
I had an ascending aortic aneurysm. And a full ascending and descending dissection.
The valve was dissected too which caused regurgitation.
Valve replaced and upper aorta grafted through open heart surgery, full cardiopulmonary bypass. Scans now show there's a kitchen sink in there!
But they left the descending dissection. My largest point of the descending is 3.8cm which is being medicinally managed.
Not giving medical advice here but I am told the descending is a little more resilient and could be less difficult to fix.
Everyone is different and aneurysms more different again. Get another opinion.
Use your time to research without panic, and try not to lift, pull, bend or over-exert yourself.
Lock in your options and prepare for your future.

REPLY
Please sign in or register to post a reply.