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1.
Forty-six bypass grafts to tibial arteries distal to the ankle were performed in 35 patients for salvage of extremities threatened by gangrene or nonhealing ulcers (grade III, category 5) or ischemic rest pain (grade II, category 4). Most patients (80%) were diabetic, with severely calcified arteries, whom previously we would have considered as candidates for primary amputation. All reconstructions were performed with autologous saphenous vein. Inflow was from the common femoral artery in 5 (11%), the popliteal artery in 25 (54%), or the mid-tibial arteries in 16 (35%). Life-table analysis was used to calculate primary patency and limb salvage. Results were analyzed according to origin of inflow, outflow, or configuration of the conduit (in situ saphenous vein, n = 29 [63%], reversed saphenous vein, n = 11 [24%], or nonreversed saphenous vein, n = 6 [13%]). Overall cumulative primary graft patency at 2 years for all grafts was 72%, and the cumulative limb salvage rate was 89% for the same interval. No significant differences were seen in comparing grafts originating from the femoral or popliteal level with those arising from the tibial arteries. No significant differences were noted in graft patency or limb salvage among grafts with a posterior tibial, dorsalis pedis, or plantar artery outflow. No significant difference was noted between in situ saphenous vein grafts and reversed saphenous vein grafts. A significant decreased primary patency was noted for grafts performed with nonreversed, translocated saphenous vein. We conclude that bypass grafts to the ankle or foot vessels are beneficial and should be considered for limb salvage in extremities with gangrene, ischemic ulceration, or ischemic rest pain. In our experience, in situ saphenous vein grafts or reversed saphenous vein grafts performed similarly, whereas nonreversed saphenous vein grafts have a poorer prognosis. Vessel wall calcification requires a modification in technique for performance of these grafts but did not affect long-term performance or limb salvage, and thus should not be considered a contraindication to vascular reconstruction. The operative microscope was used in 61% (28 of 46) of these cases and found useful in creating these delicate anastomoses. Additional follow-up is needed to document the long-term results of these very distal reconstructions.  相似文献   

2.
PURPOSE: This study assessed whether multisegmental disease that is severe enough to require an inflow procedure adversely affects infrainguinal bypass patency, limb salvage, or patient survival rates. METHODS: The records of 495 patients who underwent 551 infrainguinal bypass grafting procedures were reviewed. Saphenous vein and prosthetic grafts were evaluated separately. Graft patency rates, patient limb salvage rates, and patient survival rates in those grafts that arose from a reconstructed inflow source were compared with those that arose from normal, nonreconstructed inflow sources. When grafts had either hemodynamic failure or occlusion, the cause of failure was identified. RESULTS: Four-year primary patency rates in vein grafts that arose from a reconstructed inflow sources were lower than those in grafts that arose from nonreconstructed inflow sources (41% vs 54%; p = 0.006). Assisted primary patency rates and secondary patency rates, however, were similar (62% vs 74% and 64% vs 77%, respectively). The 4-year primary patency rate (45% vs 55%), assisted primary patency rate (60% vs 60%), and secondary patency rate (60% vs 61%) in prosthetic grafts did not vary based on inflow source. The most common cause of graft failure was inflow failure, except in the vein grafts that did not require an inflow procedure, in which the most common cause of failure was graft failure. Inflow failure occurred in 24% and 22% of the vein and prosthetic grafts with multisegmental disease, respectively, but in only 7% (p < 0.001) and 10% (p < 0.05), respectively, of those that arose from normal nonreconstructed inflow. The presence of an inflow procedure did not affect limb salvage rates or patient survival rates, regardless of graft material. CONCLUSIONS: Long-term patency rates, patient limb salvage rates, and survival rates in patients with a reconstructed inflow source were similar to those of patients with a normal nonreconstructed inflow. A major cause of occlusion is inflow failure, and this occurs in a greater proportion of patients with multisegmental disease. These patients, in particular, may benefit from patient surveillance to screen for progression of their inflow disease and to allow for intervention before infrainguinal graft occlusion.  相似文献   

3.
PURPOSE: To determine the optimal surgical strategies in reoperative infrainguinal bypass, we reviewed our results in 300 consecutive secondary bypasses in 251 patients operated on between Jan. 1, 1975, and Nov. 1, 1993. METHODS: There were 168 men (67%) and 83 women (33%), with a mean age of 64.8 years and a typical distribution of risk factors including smoking (76.4%), diabetes (33.7%), and coronary artery disease (47.1%). The indications for surgery were limb-threatening ischemia in 83.5% and severe claudication in 16.5% of patients. The majority of conduits (n = 213) were autogenous vein and were composed of a single segment of greater saphenous vein in 121 bypasses (57%) and various alternative veins including composite, arm, and lesser saphenous vein in 92 bypasses (43%). Prosthetic conduits included 69 polytetrafluoroethylene, 16 umbilical vein, and two Dacron grafts. RESULTS: There was one perioperative death (0.3%) and a 25% total morbidity rate including a 1.7% myocardial infarction rate. There was a 28.6% early (< 30 days) graft failure and 10.7% early amputation rate for prosthetic bypass grafts compared with 13.6% early graft failure and 5.6% early amputation rates for vein grafts. Autogenous vein bypasses had higher 5-year secondary patency rates than had prosthetic grafts (51.5% +/- 4.6% vs 27.4% +/- 6.1%, p < 0.001). Results with autogenous vein bypass improved significantly from the 1975 to 1984 to the 1985 to 1993 interval with 5-year secondary patency rates increasing from 38.3% +/- 6.9% to 59.1% +/- 5.8% (p = 0.017) and 5-year limb-salvage rates increasing from 40.4% +/- 7.6% to 72.4% +/- 6.6% (p < 0.001). Vein grafts to the popliteal and tibial outflow levels had equivalent long-term results. Vein grafts completed for claudication demonstrated results superior to those for limb salvage, with a 5-year secondary patency rate of 75.8% +/- 8.1% versus 52.3% +/- 7.9% (p = 0.048). Secondary autogenous vein bypass grafting performed after early primary graft failure (< 3 months) did particularly poorly, with only a 27.2% +/- 7.7% 4-year secondary patency rate. Greater saphenous veins tended to perform better than alternative vein bypasses, with a 5-year secondary patency rate of 68.5% +/- 6.0% compared with 48.3% +/- 10.5% (p = 0.09) and a 5-year limb-salvage rate of 77.8% +/- 7.4% versus 54.2% +/- 11.8% (p = 0.046). CONCLUSIONS: When patients suffer a recurrence of limb-threatening ischemia at the time of infrainguinal graft failure, aggressive attempts at secondary revascularization with autogenous vein are warranted based on the low surgical morbidity and mortality rates and the improved patency and limb salvage rates that are currently attainable.  相似文献   

4.
PURPOSE: Infrainguinal reconstruction traditionally has been reserved for patients with limb-threatening ischemia. Surgery for debilitating claudication, however, has been discouraged as a result of the perceived fear of bypass graft failure, limb loss, and significant perioperative complications that may be worse than the natural history of the disease. In this study, the results of infrainguinal reconstructions for claudication performed during the past 10 years were evaluated for bypass graft patency, limb loss, and long-term survival rates. METHODS: Data were collected and reviewed from the vascular registry, the office charts, and the hospital records for patients who underwent infrainguinal bypass grafting for claudication. RESULTS: From 1987 to 1997, 409 infrainguinal reconstructions were performed for claudication (9% of all infrainguinal reconstructions in our unit). The patient population had the following demographics: 73% men, 28% with diabetes, 54% smokers, and an average age of 64 years (range, 24 to 91 years). Inflow was from the following arteries: iliac artery/graft, 10%; common femoral artery, 52%; superficial femoral artery, 19%; profunda femoris artery, 16%; and popliteal artery, 2%. The outflow vessels were the following arteries: 165 above-knee popliteal arteries (40%), 150 below-knee popliteal arteries (37%), and 94 tibial vessels (23%). The operative mortality rate was 0%, and one limb was lost in the series from distal embolization. The primary patency rates were 62%, 77%, and 86% for above-knee popliteal artery, below-knee popliteal artery, and tibial vessel reconstructions at 4 years, and the secondary patency rates were 64%, 81%, and 90%, respectively. Cumulative patient survival rates were 93% and 80% at 4 and 6 years as compared with 65% and 52%, respectively, for infrainguinal reconstructions performed for limb salvage. CONCLUSION: Infrainguinal arterial reconstruction for disabling claudication is a safe and durable procedure in selected patients. These data indicate that concern for limb loss, death, and limited life span of the patients with this disease may not be warranted.  相似文献   

5.
PURPOSE: Current information concerning the results of surgical revision of threatened infrainguinal vein grafts is largely limited to in situ conduits. Infrainguinal grafts may be threatened by intrinsic graft lesions or significant stenosis in the adjacent inflow or outflow arteries. To assess the results of operative revision of infrainguinal reversed vein grafts, we reviewed our experience with surgical revision of threatened infrainguinal reversed vein grafts identified through a program of postoperative clinical and vascular laboratory graft surveillance. METHODS: All patients who underwent surgical revision of a threatened but patent infrainguinal reversed vein graft from January 1987 through April 1993 were identified through review of our vascular registry. Data were analyzed for type of vein used, date of original reversed vein graft, clinical and vascular laboratory findings leading to reversed vein graft revision, results of preoperative angiography, patient risk factors, operative techniques and complications, and long-term assisted primary graft patency and limb salvage. RESULTS: Ninety-six patients with 100 infrainguinal reversed vein grafts (69) femoral-popliteal, 31 femoral-tibial) underwent 117 surgical vein graft revisions or inflow procedures during the study period. Eighty-one percent of the original reversed vein grafts consisted of a single segment of greater saphenous vein. All revised grafts had at least a 50% stenosis in the graft itself or the proximal or distal artery. A single revision was performed in 85 grafts, two revisions in 13 grafts, and three revisions in two grafts. There were nine (8%) isolated inflow procedures, eight (7%) vein patch angioplasties, 62 (53%) interposition vein grafts, and 29 (25%) vein graft extensions to a new distal anastomotic site. The remaining nine (8%) procedures consisted of combinations of the above. Median time to primary graft revision after initial graft implantation was 15 months (range 2 days to 316 months). Mean time to secondary revision after primary revision was 21 months. Operative mortality was 0.9%. Cumulative assisted primary patency of the original grafts revised for stenotic lesions was 99%, 96%, and 92% at 1, 3, and 5 years, respectively. Limb salvage was 99%, 97%, and 97% at 1, 3, and 5 years, respectively. CONCLUSIONS: Although surgical revision of reversed vein graft requires much use of alternative vein sources, these procedures can be performed with minimum mortality and provide excellent assisted primary graft patency and limb salvage.  相似文献   

6.
Lower-extremity limb salvage should parallel infrainguinal bypass graft patency. To determine factors associated with limb loss despite a patent bypass, we reviewed 191 consecutive infrainguinal bypasses in 158 patients followed prospectively over 42 months. In this series of 176 (92%) vein grafts, 15 (8%) expanded polytetrafluoroethylene grafts, 122 (64%) tibial artery bypasses, and 170 (89%) bypasses placed for limb salvage, 29 major lower-extremity (above-knee or below-knee) amputations were performed in 29 patients, 12 because of ischemia after graft thrombosis and 17 (9% of series) due to progression of soft tissue infection/necrosis despite a functioning bypass. Primary and secondary 36-month vein graft patencies by life-table analysis were 61 per cent and 81 per cent, respectively. When the 17 cases of limb loss were compared to the rest of the series, nonstatistically significant variables included male sex [11 (65%) vs 79 (56%); P = 0.608] and diabetes [12 (71%) vs 80 (57%); P = 0.310]. Statistically significant variables included black race [9 (53%) vs 39 (28%); P = 0.048]; chronic renal failure [6 (35%) vs 12 (9%); P = 0.005], placement to a tibial/pedal artery [15 (88%) vs 107 (62%); P = 0.034], distal anastomosis to the anterior tibial/dorsalis pedis (AT/DP) artery [8 (47%) vs 27 (16%); P = 0.004], and grafts requiring late revision [7 (41%) vs 22 (13%); P = 0.006]. Thirteen (76%) extremities had an intact pedal arch. Nine amputations were performed within 30 days (early group), and eight were performed from 45 days to 20 months (median, 8 months) after bypass placement (late group). The most common primary causes of limb loss in the early group were overwhelming progression of soft-tissue infection despite patent bypass (n = 4; 44%) and insufficient runoff in the foot (n = 3; 33%). In the late group, amputation most often followed long treatment of a chronic proximal diabetic neuropathic foot ulcer with osteomyelitis. Five (63%) grafts in this group were anastomosed to the AT/DP arteries. These data suggest that patients with chronic renal failure, chronic neuropathic heel ulcers, and an AT/DP bypass are at greater risk for amputation despite a working bypass, especially if the graft develops a hemodynamically significant stenosis. Careful judgment and patient selection under these circumstances are thus justified.  相似文献   

7.
PURPOSE: This study was designed to determine whether, in primary infrainguinal bypass grafts in which only saphenous vein is used as the graft conduit, routine monitoring with intraoperative angioscopy can improve early graft patency as compared with standard monitoring with intraoperative completion angiography; and to delineate the advantages and disadvantages of these two modalities and their respective roles for the routine monitoring of the infrainguinal bypass graft. METHODS: A total of 293 patients undergoing primary saphenous vein infrainguinal bypass grafting were prospectively randomized and monitored with either completion angioscopy or completion angiography. Clinical parameters, indications for operation, graft anatomy, and configuration were evenly matched in both groups. Forty-three bypasses were excluded from the study after randomization, including 12 veins randomized to angiogram, deemed inferior, and prepared with angioscopy. RESULTS: In the 250 bypass grafts (angioscopy 128, angiography 122) there were 39 interventions (conduit, 29; anastomosis, 8; distal artery, 2), 32 with angioscopy and 7 with angiography (p < 0.0001). Twelve (4.8%) of the 250 grafts failed in less than 30 days, four (3.1%) of 128 in the angioscopy group and eight (6.6%) of 122 in the angiography group (p = 0.11 by one-sided hypothesis test). CONCLUSION: Although no statistical improvement in the proportions of failures in primary saphenous vein bypass grafts routinely monitored with completion angioscopy rather than the standard completion angiogram was demonstrated, the study delineates a trend that favors completion angioscopy for routine vein graft monitoring and demonstrates the advantages of angioscopy in preparing the optimal vein conduit.  相似文献   

8.
28 patients with 30 ischemic lower limbs were treated by in situ saphenous vein femorodistal arterial bypass using self-made valvulotome at Zhongshan Hospital from 1989 to 1994. All patients had claudication in the lower extremities and were diagnosed angiographically. The preoperative ABI was from 0 to 0.57 (mean 0.41). All the vein grafts were patent postoperation and the dorsalis pedis or posterior tibial arteries were palpable in 18 legs immediately postoperation and the dorsalis pedis or comitant arterial reconstruction. Graft occlusion within 3 days after original operations occurred in three cases and secondary surgical corrections were successful. Postoperative mean ABI increased from 0.41 to 0.84. The limb salvage rate was 100% and the cumulative patency rate, by the lifetable analysis in 1, 2, 3, 4 and 5 years, were 92%, 88%, 86%, 78% and 71% respectively. The results suggest that the in situ saphenous vein arterial bypass is the superior method for distal arterial reconstruction and concomitant procedures to ensure sufficient inflow as well as outflow are essential to the patency of the graft.  相似文献   

9.
The poor results obtained with the use of prosthesis in infrapopliteal arterial bypass grafting for critical limb ischaemia led to the introduction of several types of adjuvant arteriovenous fistula to improve the patency and limb salvage rates in patients who have no suitable autologous vein. The main aim of adjunctive arteriovenous fistula in infrageniculate prosthetic bypass is to accelerate the blood flow velocity through the prosthetic graft above the thrombotic threshold level. Since they are subject of great debate among vascular surgeons, the Authors have briefly reviewed the haemodynamic aspects and results reported with the use of such procedures.  相似文献   

10.
Results with 111 femoral-infrapopliteal vein grafts in 105 patients were subjected to life-table analysis. The overall five-year cumulative graft patency rate of 46% was associated with a 60% limb salvage rate. In cases in which the infrapopliteal graft represented the initial operative procedure, the five-year limb salvage and patency rates (69% and 56%, respectively) were significantly higher (P less than .05) than those achieved with secondary grafts (38% and 22%, respectively). Most limbs (79%) with failed intrapopliteal grafts, without further attempts at reconstruction, required major amputation within six months. The site of the distal anastomosis (anterior tibial, posterior tibial, or peroneal arteries) proved not to be a significant factor in determining long-term limb salvage or graft patency rates. Furthermore, the differences between five-year salvage and patency rates in diabetics (45% and 32%, respectively) and nondiabetics (65% and 53%, respectively) approached but did not reach statistical significance. It is believed these observations support the established but controversial role of infrapopliteal bypass in advanced peripheral occlusive diseases.  相似文献   

11.
PURPOSE: Superior vena cava (SVC) reconstructions are rarely performed; therefore the need for surveillance and the results of secondary interventions are unknown. METHODS: During a 14-year period 19 patients (11 male, 8 female; mean age 41.9 years, range 8 to 69 years) underwent SVC reconstruction for symptomatic nonmalignant disease. Causes included mediastinal fibrosis (n = 12), indwelling foreign bodies (n = 4), idiopathic thrombosis (n = 2), and antithrombin III deficiency (n = 1). Spiral saphenous vein graft (n = 14), polytetrafluoroethylene (n = 4), or human allograft (n = 1) was implanted. RESULTS: No early death or pulmonary embolism occurred. Four early graft stenoses or thromboses (spiral saphenous vein graft, n = 2, polytetrafluoroethylene, n = 2) required thrombectomy, with success in three. During a mean follow-up of 49.5 months (range, 4.7 to 137 months), 95 imaging studies were performed (average, five per patient; range, one to 10 studies). Venography detected mild or moderate graft stenosis in seven patients; two progressed to severe stenosis. Two additional grafts developed early into severe stenosis. Four of 19 grafts occluded during follow-up (two polytetrafluoroethylene, two spiral saphenous vein graft). Computed tomography failed to identify stenosis in two grafts, magnetic resonance imaging failed to confirm one stenosis and one graft occlusion, and duplex scanning was inconclusive on graft patency in 10 patients. Angioplasty was performed in all four patients with severe stenosis, with simultaneous placement of Wallstents in two. One of the Wallstents occluded at 9 months. Repeat percutaneous transluminal angioplasty was necessary in two patients, with placement of Palmaz stents in one. Only one graft occlusion and one severe graft stenosis occurred beyond 1 year. The primary, primary-assisted, and secondary patency rates were 61%, 78%, and 83% at 1 year and 53%, 70%, and 74% at 5 years, respectively. CONCLUSION: Long-term secondary patency rates justify SVC grafting for benign disease. Postoperative surveillance with contrast venography is indicated in the first year to detect graft problems. Endovascular techniques may salvage and improve the patency of SVC grafts.  相似文献   

12.
The purpose of this study was to examine the role of diabetes mellitus (DM) in infrainguinal bypass graft outcome. One hundred forty-four patients who underwent 170 infrainguinal bypass grafts from 1990 to 1995 were reviewed retrospectively. Seventy-eight patients (94 bypasses) had DM and were followed for an average of 15.4 months; 13 patients were lost to follow up. The mean age was 68 years; 44 (56.4%) were men. The major indication for intervention was limb salvage for the DM (87/94, 92.6%) and non-DM (56/76, 73.7%) groups. No significant difference was found for perioperative wound complications, hematoma, myocardial infarction, or deep venous thrombosis between the DM and non-DM groups. Early mortalities were three for DM and one for non-DM patients. No significant difference was found between primary patency (p = 0.71), secondary patency (p = 0.32), limb salvage (p = 0.99), and survival (p = 0.72) between DM and non-DM groups. DM patients were more likely to have significant tissue loss (p = 0.009) and a longer hospital stay (p = 0.01). In conclusion, infrainguinal vein bypass grafting can be performed successfully in diabetic patients with comparable patency and limb-salvage rates to those without DM.  相似文献   

13.
PURPOSE: The purpose of this study was to evaluate the stenosis-free patency of open repair (vein-patch angioplasty, interposition, jump grafting) and percutaneous transluminal balloon angioplasty (PTA) of 144 vein graft stenoses that were detected during duplex scan surveillance after infrainguinal vein bypass grafting. METHODS: Patients who underwent revision of an infrainguinal vein bypass graft were analyzed for type of vein conduit, vascular laboratory findings leading to revision, repair techniques, assisted graft patency rate, procedure mortality rate, and restenosis of the repair site. RESULTS: The time of postoperative revision ranged from 1 day to 133 months (mean, 13 months). One hundred eighteen primary and 26 recurrent stenoses (peak systolic velocity, >300 cm/s) in 52 tibial and 35 popliteal vein bypass grafts were identified by means of duplex scanning. The repairs consisted of 77 open procedures (vein-patch angioplasty, 28; vein interposition, 33; jump graft, 9; primary repair, 3) and 67 PTAs. No patient died as a result of intervention. Cumulative assisted graft patency rate (life-table analysis) was 91% at 1 year and 80% at 3 years. At 2 years, cumulative assisted graft patency rate was comparable for saphenous vein grafts (reversed, 94%; in situ, 88%; nonreversed, 63%) and alternative vein grafts (89%). Stenosis-free patency rate at 2 years was identical (P =.55) for surgical intervention (63%) and endovascular intervention (63%) but varied with type of surgical revision (P =.04) and time of intervention (<4 months, 45%; >4 months, 71%; P =.006). The use of duplex scan-monitored PTA to treat focal stenoses (<2 cm) and late-appearing stenoses (>3 months) was associated with a stenosis-free patency rate that was 89% at 1 year. After intervention, the alternative vein bypass grafts necessitated twice the reinterventions per month of graft survival (P =.01). Bypass graft to the popliteal versus infrageniculate arteries, site of graft stenosis (vein conduit, anastomotic region), and repair of a primary versus a recurrent stenosis did not influence the outcome after intervention. CONCLUSION: The revision of duplex scan-detected vein graft stenosis with surgical or endovascular techniques was associated with an excellent patency rate, including when intervention on alternative vein conduits or treatment of restenosis was necessary. When PTA was selected on the basis of clinical and duplex scan selection criteria, the endovascular treatment of focal vein graft stenosis was effective, durable, and comparable with the surgical revision of more extensive lesions.  相似文献   

14.
A 27-year experience with 252 popliteal artery aneurysms in 167 patients is reviewed. Long-term results with respect to graft patency and limb salvage rates are analyzed. The results emphasize the importance of early surgical intervention and demonstrate the superiority of autologous saphenous vein over other graft materials.  相似文献   

15.
Poor long-term patency of saphenous vein grafts limits the long-term success of the coronary artery bypass operation. If this is to be improved, either measures that increase the patency of saphenous vein grafts or alternative conduits are required. The benefits of using the left internal mammary artery as a pedicled graft to the left anterior descending coronary artery have prompted increasing use of arterial grafts to further improve outcome. Concurrently advances in the understanding of the pathological processes underlying saphenous vein graft occlusion raise the possibility of improving vein graft patency. In this paper we review the problem of vein graft occlusion and possible solutions, the theoretical benefits of arterial grafts and the clinical results associated with their use.  相似文献   

16.
OBJECTIVE: New techniques for minimally invasive coronary artery bypass grafting have recently emerged. The purpose of this study was to determine the safety and efficacy of Port-Access (Heartport, Inc., Redwood City, Calif.) coronary revascularization and to evaluate with angiography the early graft patency rate with this new approach. METHODS: From October 1996 to May 1997, 31 patients underwent Port-Access coronary artery bypass grafting with an anterior minithoracotomy and endovascular-occlusion cardiopulmonary bypass. There were 26 men and 5 women with a mean age of 62 years (range 42 to 82 years). Fifteen patients underwent single bypass; 12 patients underwent double bypass, and 4 patients underwent triple bypass. Bypass conduits included the left internal thoracic artery (n = 30), right internal thoracic artery (n = 2), radial artery (n = 10), and saphenous vein (n = 6). Three sequential grafts were used. Angiographic studies of the bypass grafts were performed in 27 of 31 patients (87%). RESULTS: There were no deaths, neurologic deficits, myocardial infarctions, or aortic dissections. Conversion to sternotomy was not required in any case. There were two reoperations for bleeding, one reoperation for tamponade, and one reoperation for pulmonary embolus. Postoperative angiography revealed anastomotic patency of the left internal thoracic artery to left anterior descending artery in 26 of 26 grafts (100%) with overall anastomotic patency in 43 of 44 grafts (97.7%). CONCLUSION: These results demonstrate that Port-Access coronary artery bypass can be performed accurately and safely with acceptable morbidity. This approach allows for multivessel revascularization on an arrested, protected heart with excellent anastomotic precision and reproducible early graft patency.  相似文献   

17.
Thirty-seven grafts of expanded polytetrafluoroethylene were implanted in 28 patients in whom autogeneous saphenous vein was not available, either for symptoms of severe claudication or limb salvage. The length of follow-up ranges from 8 to 28 months . The patency rate is 86.9 percent for the patients with severe claudication and 71.4 percent in the limb salvage group; the overall patency rate is 81 percent. We believe that expanded polytetrafluoroethylene is a good prosthetic substitute when autogenous vein is unavailable.  相似文献   

18.
PURPOSE: The purpose of this study was to review the treatment of patients with failed or infected axillofemoral bypass grafts and to determine the efficacy of remedial procedures in maintaining graft patency and limb preservation. METHODS: Thirty-four patients with 37 failed or infected axillofemoral grafts were retrospectively reviewed. In nine cases there was no attempt at revascularization, and in the remaining 28 cases, a total of 52 remedial procedures was performed. Nine were performed in patients with graft infection and 43 in patients with graft thrombosis. In patients with axillofemoral graft failure, 21 thrombectomies, 13 graft revisions, and 9 secondary reconstructions were performed. Eighty-eight percent of patients were monitored at least 2 years or until graft failure. RESULTS: Eight of nine patients receiving no remedial procedure required major amputation. The limb salvage rate was 64% +/- 11% at 30 months in the 25 patients undergoing remedial procedures. Twenty-eight percent of failed axillofemoral grafts remained patent at 2 years after initial failure with single or multiple thrombectomies or revisions. Life-table primary patency after secondary reconstructions (81% +/- 10.9% at 24 months) was significantly better than after thrombectomy alone (10% +/- 4.2% at 24 months) or graft revision (16% +/- 10.6% at 24 months) by log-rank test (p < 0.001 and p < 0.005, respectively). Patients undergoing reconstruction with descending thoracic aorta to femoral artery bypass had an 89% +/- 11% patency rate at 24 months. Graft infection resulted in a perioperative mortality rate of 22% and amputation in 57% of survivors. CONCLUSION: Axillofemoral graft failure most often results in limb loss without remedial procedures. Thrombectomy and revision procedures had poor long-term patency rates and salvaged only a minority of grafts despite multiple procedures. Reconstruction by use of an alternate source of inflow such as the descending thoracic aorta resulted in better long-term patency rates in patients well enough to tolerate a major reoperative procedure.  相似文献   

19.
Bypass graft patency with ultrafast computed tomography (= Electron Beam Tomography, EBT) was examined in 72 bypass grafts (47 saphenous veins, 25 internal mammary arteries) in 30 patients and compared with coronary angiography. Angiography was performed a mean of 4.4 +/- 3.5 months (range 1-13) from the EBT examination. Contrast material (120 ml) was continuously administered via a peripheral vein and 40 axial slices (3 mm slice thickness, 110 ms scan time) without overlap sequences were obtained, ECG triggered with the single slice scanner mode. Imaging of internal mammary artery grafts began at the thoracic inlet, for saphenous vein grafts, at the undersurface of the aorta. Sixty of 63 angiographically patent bypass grafts were determined patent by EBT (sensitivity 95%), 8 bypass grafts could not be detected by EBT, and 9 were angiographically occluded (specificity 89%). Twenty-four of 25 internal mammary artery grafts were patent at EBT and coronary angiography, one was occluded. In 27 of the 30 patients (90%), all of the angiographically patent grafts could be confirmed as open with EBT. Obstructions of 10 grafts could not be visualized with EBT. Graft insertion into native coronary vessels could be visualized in axial slices, although morphologic quantification of graft insertion stenosis (75-90%) in two cases was not possible. Three dimensional reconstruction of the 40 axial slices allowed graft anatomy to be delineated. Visualization of bypass insertion into the native coronary vessel was less successful because of opacification of the left and right ventricle. Electron beam computed tomography is a minimally invasive procedure capable of evaluating the patency of saphenous vein and internal mammary artery grafts. The morphologic quantification of graft obstruction and visualization of the insertion of the bypasses into the native coronary vessels is less successful with present technology and imaging modalities.  相似文献   

20.
PURPOSE: The antiphospholipid antibodies (APL)-anticardiolipin antibodies (ACL) and lupus anticoagulant (LA)-are widely believed to be associated with decreased lower extremity bypass graft patency rates. To date, no prospective cohort study has confirmed this assumption. A prospective comparison of the result of infrainguinal revascularization procedures performed since 1990 in patients with and without APL forms the basis of this report. METHODS: Patients who underwent elective infrainguinal bypass procedures from 1990 to 1994 were evaluated for hypercoagulable states (ACL, LA, protein C, protein S, and antithrombin III). Patient data were prospectively entered in a computerized vascular registry, and postoperative follow-up was maintained for life. Graft patency, limb salvage, and patient survival rates were calculated by life-table methods. RESULTS: Three hundred twenty-seven lower extremity bypass grafting procedures were performed in 262 patients. APLs were present in 83 patients (32%); 70 patients (84%) had ACLs only, 11 patients (13%) had LA only, and two patients (3%) had both ACLs and LA. There was no significant difference between APL-positive and APL-negative patients with respect to demographics, associated medical conditions, indication for operations, and type of procedures performed. More patients who had APLs had warfarin treatment after surgery (43% vs 24%, p = 0.002). Life table 4-year primary patency rates showed minimal difference (APL-positive, 43%; APL-negative, 59%; p = 0.087), and no significant difference was noted in assisted primary patency rates (APL positive, 72%; APL negative, 73%; p = NS), limb salvage rates (APL positive, 79%; APL negative, 88%; p = NS), and patient survival rates (APL positive, 67%; APL negative, 66%; p = NS). CONCLUSIONS: APLs were found in a surprising one third of the patients who underwent leg bypass grafting procedures. The majority of APLs identified were ACLs (87%). There was minimal difference in graft primary patency rates, and no difference in assisted primary patency, limb salvage, and survival rates between patients with and without APLs who underwent leg bypass grafting procedures. The extreme morbidity rate associated with APLs in previous reports is not confirmed by this prospective study. APLs should not be regarded as a contraindication to indicated leg bypass grafting procedures.  相似文献   

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