17 research outputs found

    Ten Years After Arterial Bypass Surgery for Claudication: Venous Bypass is the Primary Procedure for TASC C and D Lesions

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    Background: The appropriate role for surgery and endovascular therapy for severe intermittent claudication (IC) remains controversial. We present our results after infrainguinal autogenous bypass for severe IC more than 10years ago giving a reasoned argument to perform vein bypass as the primary procedure for severe IC. Methods: Our prospectively designed database includes more than 1,000 infrainguinal bypasses following an all-autogenous policy. For this review only patients operated on for severe IC at least 10years ago were included. The primary end points were survival and primary and assisted-primary patency rates. Results: From October 1988 until December 2000, 124 bypasses for IC were performed. Ninety-five patients were male and the mean age was 64.5±10.8years. Survival after 10years was 50.3% according to life table analysis. Forty bypasses were to the supragenicular artery, 62 to the infragenicular popliteal artery, and 22 to the tibial artery. Thirty-day mortality was 0.8% (1 patient). The primary patency rate after 10years was 63.5% and the assisted-primary patency rate 87.3%. Conclusion: Infrainguinal venous bypass for severe IC has excellent long-term results. Our results are strong arguments against the liberal use of stenting long lesions of the femoropopliteal artery. Venous bypass remains the primary procedure for TASC C and D lesions in claudicant

    Endarterectomy of the Aneurysm Sac in Open Abdominal Aortic Aneurysm Repair Reduces Perigraft Seroma and Improves Graft Incorporation

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    Background: Fluid around the graft in the original aneurysm sac after open abdominal aortic aneurysm (AAA) repair is a poorly researched phenomenon. If large, such perigraft seroma can cause symptoms of compression, and cases of rupture have even been described. We assessed whether endarterectomy of the aneurysm sac reduces the incidence of perigraft fluid and improves graft incorporation. Design and methods: Starting in July 2005, all patients with elective open AAA repair were alternately treated either with conventional thrombectomy or thrombectomy plus endarterectomy of the aneurysm sac. All patients were treated with a polytetrafluoroethylene (PTFE) graft. The maximum axial width of the perigraft fluid collection was measured on computed tomography (CT) scans 1year after operation. Results: The CT scans of 115 patients were available; 56 had endarterectomy of the aneurysm sac and 59 did not. Fluid collections were significantly smaller in patients with endarterectomy (median width 4.0 versus 8.0mm; P=0.0001). Eight patients with endarterectomy had a fluid collection wider than 10mm compared to 28 patients without endarterectomy (OR 0.18, 95% CI 0.07-0.46). After endarterectomy, 17 patients had radiological signs of complete graft incorporation in comparison to only 6 patients without endarterectomy (OR 3.85, 95% CI 1.39-10.66). No patients were symptomatic or reoperated for perigraft seroma. Conclusions: Endarterectomy of the aneurysm sac in open AAA repair appears to improve graft incorporation. The high rate of asymptomatic perigraft seroma is surprising, and its clinical significance is unknown. Ultrafiltration of PTFE grafts may be an underlying mechanis

    Major Vascular Resection and Prosthetic Replacement for Retroperitoneal Tumors

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    Introduction: Involvement of major vascular structures has been considered a limiting factor for resecting advanced tumors. The objective of this study was to evaluate the outcome after concomitant retroperitoneal tumor and vascular resection with prosthetic replacement of the aorta/vena cava. Methods: The authors reviewed a 5-year series of eight patients with a median age of 50 years (range 11-68 years) who had undergone resection of a retroperitoneal tumor and concomitant resection and replacement of the abdominal aorta, inferior vena cava, or both. The histologic diagnoses were sarcoma (five patients), teratoma (one), transitional cell carcinoma (one), and ganglioneuroma (one). The main outcome measures were early (< 30 days) and late (≥ 30 days) surgical morbidity and mortality. Secondary endpoints were vascular graft patency and tumor-free survival. Two patients underwent combined graft replacement of the aorta and vena cava. Single aortic and vena cava graft replacement were each done in three patients. Results: Two patients showed early surgical morbidity necessitating reoperation for a thrombotic graft occlusion. No patient died during the early course of the follow-up. During a median follow-up of 14 months (range 1-56 months), two patients had late surgical morbidity. The median tumor-free survival for patients with malignancy was 14 months (range 1-54 months). One patient developed locoregional tumor recurrence, and two developed distant metastases. The median survival for patients with malignancy was 14 months (range 1-60 months). Conclusions: An aggressive surgical approach for otherwise unresectable retroperitoneal tumors with vascular resection and prosthetic vascular replacement is justified in selected cases and has acceptable morbidity and mortalit

    Ten years after arterial bypass surgery for claudication : venous bypass is the primary procedure for TASC C and D lesions

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    The appropriate role for surgery and endovascular therapy for severe intermittent claudication (IC) remains controversial. We present our results after infrainguinal autogenous bypass for severe IC more than 10 years ago giving a reasoned argument to perform vein bypass as the primary procedure for severe IC

    Transposition of the persistent sciatic artery for lower limb revascularization after resection of an embolizing proximal sciatic artery aneurysm

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    We present a novel surgical technique for lower limb revascularization after resection of an aneurysm of the persistent sciatic artery that had led to recurrent peripheral embolization and severe ischemia. The superficial femoral artery in this patient was hypoplastic, and the sciatic artery continued into the popliteal artery as the source of blood supply to the lower leg. For revascularization, we used the distally pedicled healthy two-thirds of the persistent sciatic artery, transposed it from its posterior position to a nearly anatomic anteromedial position, and anastomosed it to the proximal superficial femoral artery

    The probability of restenosis, contralateral disease progression, and late neurologic events following carotid endarterectomy: a long-term follow-up study

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    BACKGROUND: Most studies that have reported on the progression of ipsilateral and/or contralateral internal carotid artery (ICA) stenosis are restricted to a few years. METHODS: Based on a single-center carotid endarterectomy (CEA) registry, we sought all patients with CEA for symptomatic high-grade ICA stenosis between 1970 and 2002. 361 CEA patients (mean age 66 years, 73% male) with annual carotid ultrasound and clinical follow-up were identified. Kaplan-Meier analysis was used to estimate the occurrence of (i) progressive ICA stenosis or restenosis of either the operated or contralateral side, and (ii) cerebrovascular events over time of either the operated or contralateral side. RESULTS: Progressive ICA disease was more likely on the contralateral than on the ipsilateral ICA (hazard ratio 2.71; CI 1.8-4.1, p > 0.001). After 5 years, the probability for progressive ICA disease was 5.2% for the ipsilateral versus 15.8% for the contralateral ICA. After 15 years, the likelihood was 37% for both sides. In the presence of progressive restenosis of the ipsilateral ICA, the 20-year probability of further ischemic cerebrovascular events was 50% compared to 18% in patients without ICA disease progression. For the contralateral ICA, the probability of further ischemic events was 24.5% in patients with ICA disease progression compared to 9.6% without ICA disease progression (15 years). CONCLUSION: 15 years after CEA, one third of the patients can be expected to develop progressive ICA disease. While ICA disease progression seems to be more prominent on the contralateral ICA within the first years, this difference fades out after 15 years. One out of 2 patients with ipsilateral ICA disease progression can be expected to have a recurrent cerebral ischemic event within 15 years. It remains to be determined whether consequent application of high-dose statins, optimal blood pressure management and antithrombotic therapy can reduce this rate

    Endarterectomy of the aneurysm sac in open abdominal aortic aneurysm repair reduces perigraft seroma and improves graft incorporation

    No full text
    Fluid around the graft in the original aneurysm sac after open abdominal aortic aneurysm (AAA) repair is a poorly researched phenomenon. If large, such perigraft seroma can cause symptoms of compression, and cases of rupture have even been described. We assessed whether endarterectomy of the aneurysm sac reduces the incidence of perigraft fluid and improves graft incorporation

    Endarterectomy of the Aneurysm Sac in Open Abdominal Aortic Aneurysm Repair Reduces Perigraft Seroma and Improves Graft Incorporation

    No full text
    Fluid around the graft in the original aneurysm sac after open abdominal aortic aneurysm (AAA) repair is a poorly researched phenomenon. If large, such perigraft seroma can cause symptoms of compression, and cases of rupture have even been described. We assessed whether endarterectomy of the aneurysm sac reduces the incidence of perigraft fluid and improves graft incorporation
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