Journal of vascular surgery
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Comparative Study
Aortic clamping during elective operations for infrarenal disease: The influence of clamping time on renal function.
Aortic clamping proximal to the renal arteries is sometimes necessitated during infrarenal and juxtarenal aortic surgery and may be associated with an increased risk of renal ischemia and its consequences. The aim of the study was to estimate this risk and possibly identify a "safe" duration of renal ischemia. ⋯ Postoperative renal function impairment is rare in this group of patients. If suprarenal clamp duration (renal ischemia time) is brief, patients with normal preoperative creatinine levels exhibit no increase or a marginal increase in BUN or creatinine levels after surgery. Accordingly, suprarenal aortic clamping less than 50 minutes in this patient group appears safe and well tolerated.
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Comparative Study
Subdural hematoma after thoracoabdominal aortic aneurysm repair: an underreported complication of spinal fluid drainage?
Cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) drainage is a commonly used adjunct to thoracoabdominal aortic aneurysm (TAAA) repair that improves perioperative spinal cord perfusion and thereby decreases the incidence of paraplegia. To date, little data exist on possible complications, such as subdural hematoma caused by stretching and tearing of dural veins, should CSF drainage be excessive. We reviewed our experience with patients in whom postoperative subdural hematomas were detected. ⋯ Subdural hematoma is an unusual and potentially catastrophic complication after TAAA repair. Prompt recognition and neurosurgical intervention is necessary for survival and recovery after acute presentation. Epidural placement of a blood patch is recommended if a chronic subdural hematoma is detected. Care should be taken to ensure that excessive CSF is not drained perioperatively, and higher (10 cm H(2)O) lumbar drain popoff pressures may be necessary together with meticulous monitoring of patient position and neurologic status.
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Ischemic preconditioning before lower limb ischemia--reperfusion protects against acute lung injury.
Prolonged limb ischemia followed by reperfusion (I/R) is associated with a systemic inflammatory response syndrome and remote acute lung injury. Ischemic preconditioning (IPC), achieved with repeated brief periods of I/R before the prolonged ischemic period, has been shown to protect skeletal muscle against ischemic injury. The aim of this study was to ascertain whether IPC of the limb before I/R injury also attenuates systemic inflammation and acute lung injury in a fully resuscitated porcine model of hind limb I/R. ⋯ Lower limb IPC protects against systemic inflammation and acute lung injury in lower limb I/R injury.
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Carotid endarterectomy (CEA) is associated with a risk of cerebral ischemia during carotid clamping, particularly in the face of contralateral internal carotid artery (ICA) occlusion. We examined the results of CEA with continuous electroencephalography in patients without and with contralateral ICA occlusion. ⋯ Routine use of electroencephalography was associated with apparent complete elimination of intraoperative strokes and less than 1% risk of perioperative strokes. These observations appear to be true even in the face of contralateral ICA occlusion. Electroencephalography is a sensitive detector of cerebral ischemia and a valuable tool for determination of need for shunting during CEA. Surgeons should consider routine use of electroencephalography and selective shunting for significant electroencephalographic changes with clamping.
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Matrix metalloproteinases are enzymes capable of breaking down all of the components of the extracellular matrix and have been implicated in the development of aneurysm formation. Because matrix metalloproteinase-9 (MMP-9) levels are elevated in aortic aneurysmal tissue and in that patient plasma, we hypothesized that plasma MMP-9 levels should decrease significantly after conventional and endovascular infrarenal abdominal aortic aneurysm (AAA) repair but that plasma MMP-9 levels would remain elevated in patients with endoleaks. ⋯ Plasma MMP-9 levels remain elevated for as much as 3 months after conventional AAA repair, whereas successful endovascular exclusion of an AAA results in decreased plasma MMP-9 levels by 3 months. MMP-9 may have clinical value as an enzymatic marker for endoleak after endovascular AAA exclusion.