首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
     


Endovascular aortounifemoral grafts and femorofemoral bypass for bilateral limb-threatening ischemia
Authors:Takao Ohki MD  Michael L. Marin MD  Frank J. Veith MD  Ross T. Lyon MD  Luis A. Sanchez MD  William D. Suggs MD  John G. Yuan MD  Reese A. Wain MD  Richard E. Parsons MD  Amit Patel MD  Steven P. Rivers MD  Jacob Cynamon MD  Curtis W. Bakal MD
Affiliation:New York, N.Y., and Tokyo, Japan
Abstract:Purpose: Although axillobifemoral bypass procedures have a lower mortality rate than aortobifemoral bypass procedures, they are limited by decreased patency, moderate hemodynamic improvement, and the need for general anesthesia. This report describes an alternative approach to bilateral aortoiliac occlusive disease using unilateral endovascular aortofemoral bypass procedures in combination with standard femorofemoral reconstructions.Methods: Seven patients who had bilateral critical ischemia and tissue necrosis in association with severe comorbid medical illnesses underwent implantation of unilateral aortofemoral endovascular grafts, which were inserted into predilated, recanalized iliac arteries. The proximal end of the endovascular graft was fixed to the distal aorta or common iliac artery with a Palmaz stent. The distal end of the graft was suture-anastomosed to the ipsilateral patent outflow vessel, and a femorofemoral bypass procedure was then performed.Results: All endovascular grafts were successfully inserted through five occluded and two diffusely stenotic iliac arteries under either local (1), epidural (5), or general anesthesia (1). The mean thigh pulse volume recording amplitudes increased from 9 ± 3 mm to 30 ± 7 mm and from 6 ± 2 mm to 26 ± 4 mm ipsilateral and contralateral to the aortofemoral graft insertion, respectively. In all cases the symptoms completely resolved. Procedural complications were limited to one local wound hematoma. No graft thromboses occurred during follow-up to 28 months (mean, 17 months).Conclusions: Endovascular iliac grafts in combination with standard femorofemoral bypass grafts may be an effective alternative to axillobifemoral bypass in high-risk patients who have diffuse aortoiliac occlusive disease, particularly when bilateral axillary-subclavian disease is present. (J Vasc Surg 1996;24;984-97.)
Keywords:
本文献已被 ScienceDirect 等数据库收录!
设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号