Delineation of peripheral and coronary detail by intraoperative angioscopy

In this study, the development of intraoperative angioscopy, the value of the information obtained, and the problems encountered with the procedure are reported. Eight angioscopes, 1.5 to 2.8 mm in diameter, with a line resolution of greater than 0.4 mm at 5 mm, were used. One-hundred ten angioscopi...

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Veröffentlicht in:Annals of surgery 1985-09, Vol.202 (3), p.394-400
Hauptverfasser: Grundfest, W S, Litvack, F, Sherman, T, Carroll, R, Lee, M, Chaux, A, Kass, R, Matloff, J, Berci, G, Swan, H J
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container_end_page 400
container_issue 3
container_start_page 394
container_title Annals of surgery
container_volume 202
creator Grundfest, W S
Litvack, F
Sherman, T
Carroll, R
Lee, M
Chaux, A
Kass, R
Matloff, J
Berci, G
Swan, H J
description In this study, the development of intraoperative angioscopy, the value of the information obtained, and the problems encountered with the procedure are reported. Eight angioscopes, 1.5 to 2.8 mm in diameter, with a line resolution of greater than 0.4 mm at 5 mm, were used. One-hundred ten angioscopic investigations were performed in 46 patients; 24 at peripheral bypass surgery and 22 at coronary artery bypass surgery. These included 68 arteries, 28 new anastomoses, six old grafts, five laser angioplasties, and three in situ vein grafts. The most important finding was that angioscopic data provide information not available from probes or angiography. Angioscopic findings were responsible for a change in surgical procedures in 12 patients (26%) including three anastomotic revisions, three alterations in graft site placement, and two repeat thrombectomies. The most significant technical problems were lack of steerability and insufficient irrigation, which resulted in poor angiographic images. Further technical development is necessary before routine intraoperative angioscopy is practical. Nevertheless, if these problems are resolved, angioscopy will provide unique, high-resolution information which can directly alter surgical therapy.
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source MEDLINE; PubMed Central; EZB Electronic Journals Library; Journals@Ovid Complete
subjects Angioplasty, Balloon - methods
Arteriovenous Shunt, Surgical
Coronary Artery Bypass - methods
Coronary Disease - surgery
Embolism - etiology
Endoscopy - adverse effects
Endoscopy - methods
Fiber Optic Technology
Humans
Intraoperative Period
Laser Therapy
Postoperative Complications - etiology
Suture Techniques
Vascular Surgical Procedures - methods
Videotape Recording
title Delineation of peripheral and coronary detail by intraoperative angioscopy
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