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Italian Rotarians spread aneurysm awareness

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Rotarian Gaetano de Donato (center) receives the RI Service Above Self Award from Past RI Director Raffaele Pallotta d'Acquapendente. Photo courtesy of the Rotary Club of Napoli (Naples)

The Rotary Club of Napoli (Naples), Italy, is fighting back against a health condition that, if undetected, can rupture the abdominal aorta without warning and cause almost instant death.

An abdominal aortic aneurysm is a bulging, weak section of the abdominal aorta that may rupture.  About three-quarters of people who suffer such a break do not live long enough to undergo surgery. Of those who do, over 40 percent do not survive.

Since the Napoli (Naples) club developed a screening program in 1999, local physicians have seen more than 6,950 people ages 65 and older, the age group most at risk. Through the country’s national health service, doctors have performed free, potentially lifesaving surgeries on 403 Naples residents.

“The screening program must become commonplace,” says vascular surgeon and club member Gaetano de Donato. “The number of deaths in the United States caused by ruptures has become comparable to those from breast or prostate cancer.”

The Rotarians originally committed themselves to this cause after de Donato presented a program about the dangers of aneurysms to his club. With support from the eight other Naples clubs, and from funds generated by a musical comedy benefit show, club members sent over 3,700 letters explaining the aneurysms and associated risk factors. More than 40 percent of recipients responded and participated in free ultrasound screening sessions during the project’s first three years.

In 2003, the club staged another musical benefit and, during the next six years, extended the project to two more city districts in Naples.

As part of the screening program, de Donato and his medical staff, including two other physicians, volunteered their time one afternoon a week. Tests revealed aneurysms that were manageable without surgery in more than 200 of the patients, for whom de Donato  prescribed medicine and lifestyle changes to address risk factors including high blood pressure, diabetes, and smoking. For patients with larger aneurysms, de Donato performed surgery, either substituting a synthetic tube for the weakened portion of a patient’s aorta or using a stent to strengthen the vessel internally.

“Success is strictly dependent on the treatment timing,” says de Donato, whose fellow club members are contacting the remaining two-thirds of the city’s at-risk residents. “The key aspect is to perform a very early diagnosis in at-risk patients.”

In light of the Napoli (Naples) club’s success, the Rotary clubs of Aversa-Terra Normanna, Caserta-Terra-di-Lavoro, Cosenza, Cosenza Nord, and Salerno-Est have started their own abdominal aortic aneurysm screening programs.


11 Comments:
At 9:27AM on 4 January 2010, Mike wrote: I have survived a ruptured Cerebral Aneurysm. Recently, I have noticed some throbbing in my abdomen that has me concerned. Some of you might find this site interesting. www.aneurysmsupport.com
At 9:26AM on 4 January 2010, Gaetano de Donato wrote: Re: N. Jayachandran asked "Is there a certain group of people more prone to this" Dear Rotarian, We have several risk factors for Abdominal aortic aneurysms (AAA). First of all is age. AAAs are rare in people under the age of 60. About one person in 1000 develops an abdominal aortic aneurysm between the ages of 60 and 65, and this number continues to rise with age. Screening studies show that abdominal aortic aneurysms occur in to 2 to 13 percent of men and 6 percent of women over the age of 65. In addition to age, a number of other factors may increase a person's risk of developing an abdominal aortic aneurysm: • A family history of abdominal aneurysm increases the risk of developing the disease and interacts with the risks associated with age and gender. The risk of developing an aneurysm among brothers of a person with a known aneurysm who are older than 60 years of age is as high as 18 percent. • Smoking markedly increases risk for AAA. The risk is directly related to number of years smoking and decreases in the years following smoking cessation. • Men develop AAAs four to five times more often than women. • People who are white develop aortic aneurysms more commonly than other groups. • People with other medical conditions, such as coronary heart disease and peripheral vascular disease, are more likely to develop AAAs.
At 9:08AM on 28 December 2009, Dr.Essam Eldin Abdel-Azim wrote: I as an eye surgeon and through the Rotary Club of Cairo Garden City, EGYPT (District 2450) did Eye Problems Awareness last year. These programs are really very beneficial for the societies.
At 9:06AM on 28 December 2009, RAMKI wrote: A WONDERFUL PROGRAMME.WISH RTN.DR.DE NATO MAKES THE STORY ON THE ROTARIAN MAGAZINE. CONGRATULATIONS FROM 3180 INDIA
At 9:03AM on 28 December 2009, N. Jayachandran wrote: Thank you for creating this awareness. Is there a certain group of people more prone to this. Please enlighten us.
At 9:04AM on 21 December 2009, J.W. PETERS wrote: Having been one of the lucky ones whose Aneurysm was discovered by chance and havbing had very succesful surgery to repair the Aneurysm, I can only endorse this programme 100%. This is a silent killer!
At 9:05AM on 21 December 2009, Rajiv Sharma wrote: Congratulations to Rotarian Gaetano de Donato - well done and God bless you
At 8:48AM on 21 December 2009, david ferguson wrote: We are an ageing club with36 members 2 of us have had surgical intervention for AAA and one is being reviewed. I would welcome routine u/s scanning for over 65's in the uk
At 9:06AM on 21 December 2009, Ron Hooker NZ wrote: I have suffered two burst aneurysms - both without warning. (burst AAA). First Nov. 2002 and repaired with surgery. I did feel pulse throbbing for months but ignored it. DON'T. Second Mar 2004 and surgery removed the artery and replaced it with a graft from heart to groin area to join leg arteries !! The tube is outside of my ribs but fortunately beneath my skin. Happily walking & performing. Surgeon said it was a miracle. Of course!! Details available. Ron
At 9:11AM on 21 December 2009, William Gambrel wrote: My father was a physician, He self- diagnosed an aortic aneurysm and subsequently had a surgery in which a section of his aorta was replaced by a man-made material. I am wondering if a self- examination can be done for an aneurysm in a similar manner to those that are done by women for breast cancer?
At 3:32PM on 18 December 2009, Cathy Roth wrote: A brilliant program and well done. Having lost my father and my aunt each to a ruptured aortic aneurysm at too young an age, I wish that there had been such a program in place to pick up their aneurysms before it was too late. Humanity in Action again - well done to all involved.

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