Journal of vascular surgery
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Endovascular stents have had a limited role in the management of trauma and vascular emergencies involving active hemorrhage. We describe a patient with delayed rupture of the infrarenal aorta after intra-abdominal sepsis caused the breakdown of a primary aortic repair. ⋯ This report describes the successful endovascular repair of an actively hemorrhaging penetrating abdominal aortic injury. Endovascular approaches to aortic injuries may be valuable in settings where a hostile abdomen precludes traditional open repair.
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Comparative Study
The safety of carotid endarterectomy in diabetic patients: clinical predictors of adverse outcome.
Patients with diabetes mellitus have been shown to have an increased incidence of complications after elective major vascular surgery. The objective of this study was to evaluate a large series of diabetic patients undergoing carotid endarterectomy (CEA) to determine if outcome differed from nondiabetic patients and to examine predisposing factors of poor outcome among diabetic patients. ⋯ Despite an increased prevalence of cardiac disease and preoperative neurologic symptoms among diabetic patients undergoing CEA, the rates of perioperative cardiac morbidity, mortality, and stroke were equal to nondiabetic patients. In contrast to nondiabetic patients, current cigarette smoking appeared to predict increased adverse neurologic outcomes among diabetic patients, and the presence of contralateral occlusion among diabetic patients appeared to predispose them towards increased perioperative mortality. The use of a general anesthetic appeared to increased perioperative neurologic risk among diabetic patients; however, this may be related to surgeon bias in the selection of anesthetic technique. Although diabetic patients may have an increase in complications after other major vascular surgical procedures, the presence of diabetes mellitus does not appear to significantly increase risk.
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Comparative Study
Cerebral microembolization after protected carotid artery stenting in surgical high-risk patients: results of a 2-year prospective study.
This was a prospective single-center study to assess and analyze cerebral embolization resulting from carotid artery stenting with neuroprotective filter devices in patients considered as poor surgical candidates for surgical carotid endarterectomy. ⋯ The incidence of new focal ischemic lesions detected by DWI is higher than expected on the basis of previous reports. Embolization from the aortic arch or common carotid arteries could account for most of those events in patients considered as surgical high-risk patients. Although 90% of the events were clinically silent, this high rate of microembolization raises questions about the possible consequences on cerebral cognitive functions.
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Comparative Study
Total laparoscopic versus conventional abdominal aortic aneurysm repair: a case-control study.
This study was designed to identify differences in the per- and postoperative outcomes between total laparoscopic and open surgical repair of abdominal aortic aneurysms (AAA). ⋯ This case-control study provides preliminary results that short-term outcomes of total laparoscopic AAA repair are comparable with those of open surgery. Peroperative data demonstrate that laparoscopy is more technically demanding than open repair. However, the technical challenge of laparoscopy does not worsen the postoperative course.
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Comparative Study
Rapamycin-coated expanded polytetrafluoroethylene bypass grafts exhibit decreased anastomotic neointimal hyperplasia in a porcine model.
We tested the hypothesis that rapamycin coated onto, and eluted from, expanded polytetrafluoroethylene (ePTFE) grafts would diminish neointimal hyperplasia in a porcine model. ⋯ Rapamycin-eluting ePTFE grafts decrease neointimal hyperplasia in a porcine model. Further studies are needed to evaluate whether patency will be improved. Rapamycin-eluting ePTFE grafts may allow the use of prosthetic grafts in situations in which autologous vein is unavailable and in which neointimal hyperplasia is pronounced, such as in small-diameter (<6-mm) vessels typical of infrapopliteal interventions.