Combined transluminal angioplasty and infrainguinal reconstruction in multilevel atherosclerotic disease

Patients with multilevel atherosclerotic disease represent a difficult surgical challenge. This report is a retrospective review of 46 patients who were treated using a combination of iliac transluminal angioplasty and infrainguinal reconstruction. There were 42 male and 4 female patients with an av...

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Veröffentlicht in:The American journal of surgery 1990-09, Vol.160 (3), p.277-279
Hauptverfasser: Peterkin, George A., Belkin, Michael, Cantelmo, Nancy L., Guben, Jon, Greenfield, Alan J., Johnson, Willard C., Menzoian, James O.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Patients with multilevel atherosclerotic disease represent a difficult surgical challenge. This report is a retrospective review of 46 patients who were treated using a combination of iliac transluminal angioplasty and infrainguinal reconstruction. There were 42 male and 4 female patients with an average age of 62 years (range: 40 to 74 years). Follow-up ranged from 1 month to 10 years (mean: 27.3 months). These patients had multiple health problems typical of patients with peripheral vascular disease, including coronary artery disease (67%), hypertension (61%), and diabetes mellitus (42%); 80% of the patients were smokers. Forty-one patients were treated for rest pain and/or tissue loss, while five were treated for incapacitating claudication. Forty-three patients had a combination of angioplasty and distal bypass, while 3 patients had a form of femoral endarterectomy. Iliac artery presure gradients were reduced from 35.4±4 mm Hg preangioplasty to 0.6±0.3 mm Hg postangioplasty. The procedures were well tolerated with no mortality and four serious complications. Vascular laboratory studies showed an improvement in the mean ankle-brachial index from 0.35±0.03 preoperatively to 0.71±0.04 postoperatively (p
ISSN:0002-9610
1879-1883
DOI:10.1016/S0002-9610(06)80022-X