Results of surgical treatment of atherosclerotic aneurysm of the distal aortic arch, reported to date, are not satisfactory. We recently analyzed the surgical results in 119 patients with this condition who were treated at our department. There were 104 males and 15 females, ranging in age from 38 to 81 years (mean: 66 years). The arch was reconstructed by total replacement in 29 cases, partial replacement in 49 cases, patch reconstruction in 34 cases and extra-anatomic bypass in 7 cases. The lesion was approached by median sternotomy in 75 cases, median sternotomy+left thoracotomy in 9 cases and left thoracotomy in 35 cases. In cases where median sternotomy was used, selective cerebral perfusion was generally employed as an auxiliary procedure. After surgery, cerebral complications were observed in 19 cases (16.0%). In 15 of these 19 cases, postoperative cerebral damage was attributed to atheromatous emboli. Twenty-six patients (21.8%) died in the hospital. Major causes of death included respiratory insufficiency, multiple organ failure and low cardiac output syndrome. To improve surgical results for this type of aneurysm, the operative procedure needs to be modified so that these postoperative complications are prevented. Especially it is essential to prevent intraoperative embolisms of brain and coronary arteries, and a reconstruction by total arch replacement with median sternotomy has improved recent surgical results.