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1.
Objective: To investigate the biomechanical effect of major extremity vessels to choose appropriate repair methods for vascular injuries of the extremities. Methods : The data of 385 patients (337 males and 48 females, aged 18-71 years, mean = 32.6 years ) including 403 injured vessels, who suffered from vascular injuries of the extremities and were treated in our hospital from October 1960 to August 2005, were studied retrospectively in this article. We compared the results of different repair methods for the defect of vessels and evaluated different injured vessels for repairing arterial injuries with anastomosis and venous graft, respectively. Results: A significant difference was found between the defect lengths of the arteries repaired with anastomosis and venous graft ( P 〈 0. 0001 ). The upper limits of the confidence interval in the defect lengths of the brachial artery, the femoral artery and the popliteal artery were 3.43 cm, 2. 38 cm and 2. 42 cm, respectively, when repaired with anastomosis. The lower limits were 2.16 cm, 2.16 cm and 1. 63 cm, respectively, when repaired with venous graft. The defect length of each artery repaired with venous graft had linear correlation with the graft length. Conclusion - Because of the longitudinal biomechanical difference of different options of repair arterial injuries. human peripheral vessels, are necessary for different arterial injuries.  相似文献   

2.
Optimal limb salvage in penetrating civilian vascular trauma   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
To evaluate current treatment of peripheral vascular trauma, we reviewed our recent experience with noniatrogenic penetrating vascular injuries of the extremities. Between 1979 and 1984, 139 patients sustained 204 vascular injuries inflicted by single gunshots (64%), stabbings (24%), and shotguns (12%). Eighty-four percent of patients underwent preoperative arteriography, which revealed occult arterial injury in 13 patients (9%). Compartmental hypertension necessitated fasciotomy in 19% of patients and was required more often after combined arterial and venous injuries (29%) than after isolated arterial injury (14%). Arterial continuity was restored by interposition grafting with reversed saphenous vein (62%), end-to-end anastomosis (19%), vein patch angioplasty (8%), or primary repair (4%). After arterial repair, completion angiography detected the need for revision in 8% of patients. Arterial ligation was performed in 7% of injuries and was only used in the treatment of tibial and distal profunda femoris injuries. Forty-five percent of patients sustained concomitant venous injury; 64% of all venous injuries and 90% of femoropopliteal venous injuries were repaired. No deaths occurred, and a single patient required amputation. We conclude that a protocol of preoperative arteriography, liberal. use of fasciotomy, frequent use of autologous interposition grafts, repair of major venous injuries, and routine use of completion arteriography can result in limb salvage rates that approach 100% after penetrating vascular trauma to the extremities.  相似文献   

3.
Popliteal vascular trauma continues to be associated with a relatively high morbidity rate when compared to other major vascular injuries in extremities. There is continuing controversy regarding the management of popliteal venous injuries. The advocates of ligation of injured veins have postulated that there is an increased incidence in thrombophlebitis and pulmonary embolism associated with attempted venous repair. There is a paucity of valid statistics supporting either side of this controversy. Clinical experience documented in the Vietnam Vascular Registry and experimental work at Walter Reed Army Institute of Research have supported our more aggressive approach for venous repair. This study evaluates the management of 110 injured popliteal veins without associated popliteal arterial trauma. Nearly an equal number were ligated and repaired. Thrombophlebitis and pulmonary embolism were not significant complications in this series. The only pulmonary embolus occurred after ligation of an injured popliteal vein. However, there was a significant increase in edema of the involved extremity following ligation, 50.9% compared to 13.2% after repair.  相似文献   

4.
纵向生物力学特性对动脉损伤修复方法选择的影响   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
目的 研究人体四肢主要动脉不同长度损伤与修复方法选择之间的关系,比较由于因管纵向性物力学特性面产生的修复差异,为临床修复效果及近,远期疗效评价提供依据。方法 回顾分析应用端端吻合法和自体静脉移植法修复的四肢主要动脉伤共177例185条血管,对相同损伤部位而不同修复方法的血管的真性缺损长度做t检验比较,通过95%置信区间分析两种修复方法的选取界限。对自体静脉移植修复血管中真性缺损长度做t移植长度做线  相似文献   

5.
Venous injury: to repair or ligate, the dilemma   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
Surgical management of major venous injuries remains controversial. The medical records of 184 patients with major venous injury were reviewed. Forty-three patients had isolated venous injury; 31 of 43 patients (72%) underwent ligation to treat their vein injury. Another 141 patients had combined arterial and venous injury; 117 of these patients (83%) had ligation. Injured were the inferior vena cava, iliac, femoral, popliteal, distal leg, and arm veins; all patients underwent surgical exploration. Arterial injuries were repaired by standard techniques and venous injuries were either ligated or repaired by end-to-end or lateral phleborrhaphy. Adjunctive fasciotomy was used when clinically indicated. The patients were followed up for 1 month to 9 years. No permanent sequelae of venous ligation were identified. Transient extremity edema developed in up to 32% of patients, regardless of whether vein ligation or repair was performed. This edema resolved completely within 12 weeks of the injury. No extremity was lost after ligation of a venous injury. Although it may be ideal to repair all venous vascular injuries, selective management reflecting mechanism of injury, blood loss, anesthesia requirements, associated organ injury, and other concerns may mitigate against extensive venous repair.  相似文献   

6.
In a series of 250 civilian vascular injuries, 85 per cent were due to firearms and 50 per cent involved the torso, both of which represent an increased frequency of occurrence over other reports. There were 40 deaths, 31 of which occurred during operation or in the recovery room and were due to irreversible shock or coagulopathy. Of the nine late deaths, failure of the vascular repair was responsible for only three. In 124 extremity artery injuries, there were 12 leg amputations (10%) with shotgun wounds responsible for nine and popliteal artery injuries involved in seven. In gunshot wounds of the aorta and iliac arteries, there were five suture line disruptions in nine primary repairs and no disruptions in 11 patients repaired by grafts. The evidence indicates that an antibiotic soaked dacron graft is the method of choice to repair gunshot wounds of the aorta and iliac arteries at this time.  相似文献   

7.
With extensive vascular injuries in which a vascular conduit is required, there is controversy as to whether an autogenous or prosthetic graft is preferable. The authors reviewed their experience with 91 extremity arterial injuries in which autogenous tissue was used to repair vascular injuries of the extremities. Twenty-two patients also had concomitant repair of associated venous injuries with autogenous vein grafts. Ten patients required amputations, despite patent grafts in five patients, because of severe muscle necrosis. Two patients had thrombosis of their vein grafts develop in the early postoperative period but did not require amputation. The authors identified only one late vein graft failure in a patient in whom an infected pseudoaneurysm developed. Three patients with extensive soft tissue injuries had infection develop in vein grafts, with subsequent massive bleeding that ultimately required arterial ligation. Among the 22 patients with repair of their venous injuries, occlusion of popliteal vein repairs was documented in two patients and suspected in three others. The remainder of patients had satisfactory results. The excellent results obtained in the vast majority of the authors' patients with extremity vascular injuries reinforces their preference for using autogenous tissue whenever a vascular conduit is required. Exceptions include patients with extensive soft tissue loss precluding adequate graft coverage, the repair of large vessels, and life-threatening emergencies when there is insufficient time to harvest and prepare a vein.  相似文献   

8.
Lower extremity vascular trauma: a comprehensive, aggressive approach   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
During this study, 25 patients (26 limbs) incurred 37 vascular injuries to the lower extremity. The majority were young males injured by penetrating trauma (84%). There were 25 arterial and 12 venous injuries (two isolated). Sixteen patients had soft-tissue injuries, 12 had fractures, and six had peroneal nerve damage. Twenty-two arterial injuries were repaired, the majority (17) by saphenous vein bypass. Three tibial vessels were ligated. All major venous injuries were repaired. No synthetic material was used. Vascular repair took precedence in all but two cases. After repair, the vascular surgeon assisted with stabilization. Thirteen limbs required fasciotomy; nine required subsequent debridements and later plastic reconstruction. Limb salvage was 96%. More important, 21 patients can ambulate independently on the injured extremity (84%). These results support an aggressive approach to lower extremity vascular trauma with repair of all major arterial and venous injuries in conjunction with aggressive debridement and soft-tissue repair.  相似文献   

9.
Two hundred ninety-eight arterial injuries in 269 upper extremities were reviewed. Penetrating agents accounted for 250 injuries (93 percent) and blunt trauma for 19 (7 percent). Fifty-nine axillary, 126 brachial, 65 radial, and 48 ulnar arteries were damaged. Twenty-six extremities had more than one artery injured. The initial vascular examination revealed no abnormalities or was equivocal in 16 percent of all patients and in 32 percent of those with axillary artery injuries. Adjacent upper extremity structures were injured in 195 limbs (73 percent).Resection and primary anastomosis (54 percent) or vein interposition grafting (26 percent) were the most frequent methods of repair. Two deaths (0.7 percent) occurred and four amputations (1.5 percent) were required. Distal pulses were present at discharge in 93 percent of the evaluable extremities. Despite excellent success with arterial reconstruction, functional results were limited by associated nerve injuries. One hundred fifty patients (49 percent) had nerve deficits at discharge, and 71 (27 percent) had serious functional limitations.  相似文献   

10.
During 1968-1973, 122 patients with 126 arterial injuries were treated. In 94 instances (90 patients), these injuries involved extremities. Systolic blood pressure was below 90 mm Hg upon admission in 55.6% of all patients and 37.7% of those with injuries to arteries of the extremities. The decision for operative exploration and repair of arteries of extremities was based largely on clinical grounds (shock, loss of pulse). Preoperative arteriography was needed infrequently, while operative angiography was nearly routine. Although several cases of late revascularization or traumatic thrombosis of renal artery have been reported, hypertension complicates the postoperative period, and early, aggressive approach is essential. Mortality was 10.6%, from aortic injuries. There were no deaths among patients with arterial injuries distal to inguinal ligament or thoracic outlet. The amputation rate from reconstruction failure was 1.1%, none occurring in the last 3 years of the series. The high patency rate and lack of evidence of pulmonary embolization suggest that associated venous injuries be repaired routinely. Arterial injuries represent ideal lesions (normal arterial wall with excellent run-in and run-off). Prompt treatment of shock and early, proper management of patients' mechanical disruptions will salvage many lives and most limbs.  相似文献   

11.
An analysis of thirty-six civilian traumatic arterial injuries was performed to determine the frequency, site, and mechanism of injury. The mechanism of injury was evenly divided between penetrating (nineteen) and blunt injuries (seventeen). Blunt trauma from motor vehicle accidents and penetrating injuries from gunshot wounds accounted for approximately 85 per cent of the injuries. Four of fifteen repairs in lower extremity arterial injuries resulted in amputation. Prolonged ischemia and massive soft tissue injury were the major causes of amputation. Eleven upper extremity arterial injuries were repaired with return of distal pulses in ten patients whereas one patient required subclavian artery ligation after rupture of a saphenous vein graft repair. Approaches for exposure, means of repair, and results are discussed.  相似文献   

12.

Objective

The incidence of morbidity and mortality for iliac vascular injuries in the literature are likely overestimated owing to associated injuries. Data for isolated iliac vascular injuries are very limited. No large studies have reported the incidence of morbidity for repair versus ligation of isolated iliac vein injuries.

Methods

Patients in the National Trauma Data Bank (NTDB; 2007-2012) with at least one iliac vascular injury were analyzed. Isolated iliac vessels were defined as cases with Abbreviated Injury Scale severity score of greater than 3 for extraabdominal injuries and an Organ Injury Scale grade of greater than 3 for intraabdominal injuries.

Results

Overall, 6262 iliac vascular injuries (2809 penetrating, 3453 blunt) were identified in 271,076 patients with abdominal trauma (2.3%). There were 3379 patients (1841 penetrating, 1538 blunt) with isolated iliac vascular injuries (1.2%) and 557 patients (514 penetrating, 43 blunt) with combined iliac artery and vein injuries (0.2%). The 30-day mortality rate was 16.5% for isolated iliac vein injury, 19.3% for isolated iliac artery injury, and 48.7% for combined isolated iliac artery and vein injury. The 30-day mortality rate was 23.4% for isolated iliac vascular injuries compared with 39.0% for nonisolated iliac vascular injuries (P < .001). Patients with isolated iliac vein injuries had morbidity rates of deep venous thrombosis (repair, 14.6%; ligation, 14.1%; P = .875), pulmonary embolism (repair, 1.8%; ligation, 0.5%; P = .38), fasciotomy (repair, 9.3%; ligation, 14.6%; P = .094), amputation (repair, 1.8%; ligation, 2.6%; P = .738), acute kidney injury (repair, 5.8%; ligation, 4.7%; P = .627). Multivariate logistic regression demonstrated that ligation of isolated iliac vein injuries had an odds ratio of 2.2 for mortality compared with repair (95% confidence interval, 1.08-4.66).

Conclusions

Isolated iliac vascular injuries are associated with a high incidence of mortality, especially for combined venous and arterial injury, but mortality is significantly lower than in patients with nonisolated iliac vascular injuries. In patients with isolated iliac vein injuries, mortality was higher in patients who underwent ligation compared with repair; however, the rates of deep venous thrombosis, pulmonary embolism, fasciotomy, amputation, and acute kidney injury were not different between the treatment groups. These data lend credence to the assessment that repair of iliac vein injuries is preferable to ligation whenever feasible.  相似文献   

13.
BACKGROUND: Blunt vascular trauma in an extremity is an uncommon diagnosis. Considering the complexity of these injuries, it is worthwhile to determine how select factors affect the outcome of the limb and the patient. The objectives of this study were to review the diagnosis, management, and outcomes of patients who sustained blunt vascular injuries in the extremities and relate factors in their treatment to the outcome of the injured extremity. METHODS: A retrospective review of data on adult and pediatric patients who had a diagnosis of blunt vascular injury in an extremity and underwent some attempt at restoration of vascular flow was conducted. RESULTS: From January 1995 to December 2002, 62 patients (80.3% male; mean age, 33.2 +/- 15.8 years) sustained blunt trauma (mean Injury Severity Score, 14.6 +/- 8.4), with 93 vascular injuries in 65 extremities (16 upper and 49 lower). Hard signs of vascular injury occurred in 41 (66%) patients. An associated fracture and/or dislocation was present in 59 patients (95%). Preoperative arteriograms were obtained in 20 patients (17 occlusions, 2 embolizations, and 1 untreated). Vessel injuries were as follows: 16 upper (brachial artery, 50%) and 63 lower (tibial/peroneal/popliteal, 84%), with ligation being the most common treatment in the latter. Intravascular shunts were used to restore blood flow in 18 vessels (13 arteries and 5 veins) in 13 patients. Delays in diagnosis or treatment occurred in six patients, mostly because of errors in management/judgment. Delayed or late fasciotomies were performed in six patients, and five developed rhabdomyolysis. Six patients died. The age (p = 0.0006), Injury Severity Score (p = 0.0007), and Mangled Extremity Severity Score (p = 0.0009) were significantly different for the survivors compared with the nonsurvivors. CONCLUSION: Blunt vascular injuries in the lower extremities occur most commonly in the anteroposterior tibial arteries; injured arteries in the proximal upper and lower extremity require resection with interposition grafting, whereas those in the forearm or calf are usually ligated; the amputation rate in 65 injured extremities with blunt vascular trauma was 18.%, which is at least three times that for those who sustain penetrating injury; and delays in diagnosis and treatment are uncommon in these patients with multiple injuries.  相似文献   

14.
The management of forearm arterial trauma is controversial and follow-up data on such injuries is scant. A survey was made of 249 patients with penetrating forearm trauma to determine the incidence and outcome of arterial injury. Sixty-six patients (26.5%) sustained 69 arterial injuries documented at operation or with angiography. The clinical manifestations of arterial injury were often subtle; 42.4 per cent of the patients had normal pulses and only 7.6 per cent presented with distal ischemia. In 9.1 per cent of the patients there was no clinical evidence of vascular injury. The most frequent types of arterial injury were transection (72.5%) and partial laceration (14.5%). Arterial repair was performed in 84.8 per cent of the cases, and resection with end-to-end anastomosis was usually possible. Volar compartment fasciotomies were necessary in 18.2 per cent of the cases. The early postoperative complications seen were wound-related, and these were six times more frequent in the group undergoing arterial ligation (36% vs 6%). In 49 patients evaluated an average of 6 months after repair, the patency rate determined by clinical examination was 85.7 per cent. Because of a high incidence of associated nerve (56.1%) and tendon (54.5%) injuries, the functional status of the injured extremity was less satisfactory, with only 49.2 per cent of the patients having normal hand function. Since the forearm vessels can be repaired with minimal morbidity and acceptable results, arterial ligation is recommended only when repair is not readily accomplished, or when treatment of a more pressing associated injury demands priority.  相似文献   

15.
During a recent 11-year period, 233 consecutive patients with 358 penetrating iliac vascular injuries were treated at our institution. Injuries of the common and external iliac arteries were most often repaired with lateral suture (31%) although several other techniques were also employed. Lateral suture and ligation were used with nearly equal frequency in the management of venous injuries. The hospital mortality rate for the series was 28%, and 56/66 deaths (85%) were due to exsanguination or shock. One patient, initially treated with an end-to-end anastomosis of the iliac artery, died a year after discharge from a ruptured false aneurysm. Two patients treated with lateral suture of venous injuries died of pulmonary embolism. Arterial complications occurred in 15% of patients with arterial injuries and three patients required amputation. No graft infections occurred in 16 patients treated with PTFE interpositions, including four with associated colorectal injuries. Venous complications occurred in 12% of patients with venous injuries, and most were noted in those treated with ligation. Four patients treated by venous ligation developed chronic venous insufficiency. The prevention of death from exsanguination is the greatest problem in the management of patients with iliac vascular injuries. Although some late deaths and many complications may be related to the technique of vascular repair, circumstances often prohibit alternative methods. Despite two deaths from pulmonary embolism, insufficient data exist to condemn lateral suture of venous injuries.  相似文献   

16.
A comprehensive approach to extremity vascular trauma   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
A review of our experience with 368 patients with 382 extremity injuries has resulted in a treatment plan resulting in improved patient care and limb survival. A thorough examination of the injured extremity will help diagnose a significant vascular injury in the presence of certain clinical findings, eg, bruit or thrill (100%), signs of acute ischemia (100%), absent pulse (91%), shock (89%), neurologic deficit (78%), and hematoma (55%). Arteriography in proximity injuries has resulted in an abnormal finding in 16% of cases. A total of 165 vascular injuries, including 112 arterial and 53 venous injuries, were repaired using a variety of techniques. In 136 patients undergoing operative intervention, there was no operative mortality and a 1.5% amputation rate.  相似文献   

17.
Eighty patients with upper extremity vascular trauma were treated during a 4-year period. Of 123 vascular injuries, 95 were arterial, 1 was primary venous, and 27 were associated venous injuries. Causes included penetrating (64%), blunt (27%), and iatrogenic injuries (9%). Arteries injured were ulnar (34), radial (28), brachial (22), subclavian (6), and axillary (5). Numbers of patients with associated injuries were nerve (53), vein (27), bone (23), and soft tissue injuries (60). The most common techniques of arterial repair were end-to-end anastomosis (50), followed by interposition saphenous vein grafting (40). Fasciotomy was used in 36 patients. Two arterial repairs failed during surgery and required revision (1) or thrombectomy (1). One radial artery repair thrombosed during late follow-up, with maintenance of normal extremity perfusion via the ulnar artery. No amputations were required, and 83% of all patients treated for nerve injuries resolved or improved their neurologic deficits. Two or more operations for surgical debridement and subsequent wound closure were required in 35 patients. This study supports an aggressive approach to diagnosis and treatment of complex upper extremity vascular trauma emphasizing meticulous surgical technique, liberal use of fasciotomy, and aggressive intraoperative debridement and repair of associated injuries.  相似文献   

18.
The development of trauma surgery, especially vascular reconstruction in limb-threatening vascular and bone injuries, is closely related to the multiple military conflicts over the past 50 years. In civilians, such trauma surgery is an infrequent but difficult management problem.The aim of an interdisciplinary procedure – with adequate bone stabilization, arterial and venous revascularization (autologous) and soft tissue reconstruction – should be a functional extremity. The time taken for diagnosis, transport and bone stabilization should be as short as possible as time is of predictive value for limb salvage. Our experience with 120 patients who underwent simultaneous bone and vascular surgery for traumatic extremity injuries is reported.The incidence of arterial injury was lower than 1%, limb salvage after bone and arterial reconstruction was between 89 and 95%. The repair rather than the ligation of complex vascular injuries in severe extremity trauma is recommended for limb salvage.An interdisciplinary approach should be used, taking into account soft tissue management (debridement, fasciotomy, soft tissue reconstruction, monitoring). Our trauma management procedure is described.The extremity injury severity scores proved to be of little clinical value.Thus limb-threatening vascular injuries will always be a challenge for interdisciplinary management as well as for the vascular and trauma surgeon!  相似文献   

19.
Bullet embolism     
Bullet embolism is a rare complication of vascular trauma. During the last ten years we have treated six patients with bullet embolism. Three patients had inferior vena caval injuries with embolizations of the bullets to the heart or pulmonary arteries. Two had infrarenal aortic injuries with embolization to vessels of the lower extremities. One patient with a shotgun injury to the superficial femoral artery and vein had both arterial and venous embolizations. The site of vascular penetration was repaired in all six patients. All peripheral arterial bullet emboli were removed except for an asymptomatic shotgun pellet in the peroneal artery. One bullet was removed from a right atrium and another from a proximal pulmonary artery. Emboli in the distal pulmonary artery branches were left undisturbed in two patients. All six patients survived without any complications. A 14-year review of the literature is presented in order to emphasize some important features of this rare pathology.  相似文献   

20.
A 20-year review documented 248 vascular injuries in 210 patients from principally rural areas. The average time between injury and treatment from 1970 to 1983 was 6 hours. Between 1983 to 1990, when 46% of patients were transported by helicopter, the average delay was 4 hours. Blunt trauma (41%, with 29% motor vehicle accidents and 12% farm/industrial accidents) caused the most severe injuries and accounted for most amputations (89%) and deaths (80%). All of the blunt trauma patients had associated injuries. Penetrating injuries occurred in 59% of the patients and accounted for 11 % of the amputations and 20% of the deaths. Extremity vessels were injured 73% of the time (upper extremity, 47%; lower extremity, 26%). Eightyseven percent of the vessels injured were arteries and 13% were major venous injuries. Preoperative arteriograms were obtained in 30% of our patients. Vascular injury was determined in the others at the time of operative exploration. Vascular repair included direct anastomosis or lateral suture repair (51%), autogenous vein graft (16%), synthetic graft (6%), and ligation (19%). Primary amputation and thrombectomy were other (8%) initial treatments. In the past 10 years concomitant major peripheral venous injuries were repaired in six patients (one amputation) and ligated in one patient (no amputation). The mortality rates (4.8% total) for patients with blunt and penetrating trauma were 9.3% and 1.6%, respectively. Survival rates have not improved since the implementation of a helicopter transport system in 1983, but the amputation rate declined from 18% to 7%.  相似文献   

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