Table 1.
Urgent/emergency diseases | Patients suffering from serious diseases that involve immediate risk to life or the function of vital organs or limbs, for whom urgent/emergency surgery is indicated |
Elective diseases | Patients suffering from serious diseases that do not imply an immediate risk to life or to the function of vital organs or limbs, but who require surgical interventions that cannot be postponed for a period of more than two months |
Thoracic aortic aneurysms with a diameter >6 cm, or rapidly growing, or symptomatic, or in the presence of connective tissue disease on a genetic basis | |
Abdominal aortic aneurysms with a diameter >5.5 cm, or rapidly growing, or symptomatic, or in the presence of genetically based connective tissue disease | |
Iliac aneurysms with a diameter >4 cm, or rapidly growing, or symptomatic, or in the presence of connective tissue disease on a genetic basis | |
Symptomatic peripheral/visceral aneurysms or with a diameter >4 cm | |
Acute or subacute dissections of the descending thoracic aorta (type B according to Stanford) | |
Symptomatic carotid or supra-aortic stenosis, of any degree | |
Asymptomatic carotid or supra-aortic trunk stenosis >80% (NASCET) or with PSV > 3 m/s | |
Arteriopathy of the limbs with critical ischaemia | |
Femoro-iliocaval deep vein thrombosis at risk of pulmonary embolism |
PSV = peak systolic velocity; NASCET = The North American Symptomatic Carotid Endarterectomy Trial.