Femorofemoral grafts: The role of concomitant extended profundaplasty

Twenty-one femorofemoral grafts were placed in high risk patients with symptomatic, unilateral, iliofemoral, arterial occlusive disease. There was 100 per cent immediate postoperative relief of ischemia or improvement in claudication. Three late belowknee amputations have been performed. All other l...

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Veröffentlicht in:The American journal of surgery 1978-11, Vol.136 (5), p.622-628
Hauptverfasser: McDonald, Paul T., Rich, Norman M., Collins, George J., Anderson, Charles A., Kozloff, Louis
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container_end_page 628
container_issue 5
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container_title The American journal of surgery
container_volume 136
creator McDonald, Paul T.
Rich, Norman M.
Collins, George J.
Anderson, Charles A.
Kozloff, Louis
description Twenty-one femorofemoral grafts were placed in high risk patients with symptomatic, unilateral, iliofemoral, arterial occlusive disease. There was 100 per cent immediate postoperative relief of ischemia or improvement in claudication. Three late belowknee amputations have been performed. All other living patients had healed extremities and were ambulatory at last follow-up. Cumulative graft patency determined by the life table method was 95 per cent at twenty-four months. The physiologic “steal” created by a femorofemoral bypass with donor limb inflow and/or outflow stenosis must be considered to prevent clinical donor limb functional impairment. A gradient of 10 mm Hg or less between the radial artery mean pressure and the donor femoral artery ensured adequate donor artery flow without regard to angiographic appearance of the donor artery. The crucial technical problem in patients operated on for ischemia was reconstruction of adequate outflow. All but one patient required at least minimal profunda endarterectomy, and nine of seventeen (53 per cent) required concomitant extended profundaplasty procedures.
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subjects Age Factors
Aged
Arterial Occlusive Diseases - surgery
Arteries - transplantation
Blood Vessel Prosthesis - methods
Evaluation Studies as Topic
Female
Femoral Artery - surgery
Follow-Up Studies
Humans
Male
Middle Aged
Transplantation, Autologous
title Femorofemoral grafts: The role of concomitant extended profundaplasty
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