Doctors examined many patients who had surgery to fix a bulging aorta in their belly. They compared different ways to sew the vessel closed, including methods that touch the kidneys and those that do not. The main worry was whether these surgeries would cause permanent kidney failure requiring dialysis.
Results showed that simple repairs below the kidney were very safe. However, operations that needed to clamp or fix the vessel above the kidney had a higher chance of kidney trouble. Complex repairs also carried more risk than the simpler ones.
The study team warned that touching the kidney area increases danger. Surgeons should tell patients that moving above the kidney makes kidney failure more likely. This helps families understand the trade-offs during surgery planning.
Experts say the confidence in these numbers is not very high. Still, the pattern is clear: avoid clamping above the kidney if possible. Simple repairs below the kidney offer the best protection for kidney health.