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Does carotid eversion endarterectomy and reimplantation reduce the risk of restenosis?
Authors:René Kieny MD  Didier Hirsch MD  Christian Seiller MD  Jean-Claude Thiranos MD  Hélène Petit MD
Affiliation:(1) From the Service de Chirurgie Cardiovasculaire, Hôpital Central, Strasbourg, France
Abstract:
Two hundred twelve eversion endarterectomies of the internal carotid artery and reimplantation in the common carotid artery were performed between January 1985 and July 1990. A total of 206 patients with stenosis of 75% or more and with redundancy and tortuosity of the internal carotid artery underwent this procedure. Cumulative mortality and neurologic morbidity were 2.4%. Forty patients died during the course of follow-up, seven of neurologic causes (17.1%). Duplex scans of 107 operated carotid arteries were obtained an average of 27.1 months after surgery. Restenosis of >50% was encountered in three patients (1.9%), two asymptomatic patients (1.3%) with >75% restenosis and one symptomatic patient with occlusion (0.6%). These results contrast with a 13.5% rate of restenosis >50% (including 5.9% of restenoses >75% and 1.7% occlusions) observed after 156 consecutive endarterectomies performed and closed by direct suture by the same surgical team in 1987 at a mean follow-up of 44 months. We believe that this technique can be used more often because the operative and long-term risks are not any greater than those of the other methods of carotid revascularization. Eversion endarterectomy associated with reimplantation is especially indicated when the internal carotid artery is elongated, is <4 mm wide, and occurs in women.Presented at the Annual Meeting of the Société de Chirurgie Vasculaire de Langue Française, Marseille, France, June 21–22, 1991.
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