The present nationwide, multicenter clinical study was carried out in 26 departments of surgery to define the incidence and attendant mortality of intestinal infarction following abdominal aortic surgery, and to identify patients at risk of it. The data consist of 1752 patients who underwent abdominal aortic reconstruction during 1991-1993 as recorded in the Finnish national vascular registry (FINNVASC). Among the 1752 operations, 27 patients treated at 14 different hospitals had intestinal ischemia, and the complete patient records of all 27 cases were reanalyzed. The incidence of bowel infarction was 1.2%. Among patients operated on for a ruptured aneurysm it was 3.1%, whereas 1.0% of patients with nonruptured aneurysm and 0.6% of those operated on for aortoiliac occlusive disease developed intestinal infarction. In 14 patients (67%) the lesion affected the left colon. The overall 30-day mortality rate was 13% but reached 67% among those with intestinal infarction. We conclude that acute intestinal ischemia with bowel infarction is an infrequent but serious complication of abdominal aortic surgery. It is mainly related to surgery due to aneurysmal disease, and patients with occlusive aortoiliac disease present ischemic complications in the intestines less often. Hypotensive patients being treated for ruptured aneurysm are at greatest risk of intestinal ischemia.