Journal of vascular surgery
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Case Reports
Percutaneous transfemoral insertion of a stented graft to repair a traumatic femoral arteriovenous fistula.
This case report describes a new approach to repair a femoral arteriovenous fistula with a transluminally placed intraarterial graft-covered stent. A balloon-expandable stented polytetrafluoroethylene graft was inserted percutaneously to obliterate an arteriovenous fistula after a bullet injured the left superficial femoral artery and vein of an 18-year-old man. Follow-up duplex ultrasonography at 5 months demonstrated patency and luminal integrity of the involved artery and vein, with resolution of the associated pseudoaneurysm. Additional follow-up will be needed to further substantiate the utility of this minimally invasive procedure in the treatment of traumatic arterial injuries.
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Animal models have been used to assess the function of vascular smooth muscle and endothelium of veins grafted into arterial circulation. The primary model consists of grafting the external jugular vein into the carotid artery of the rabbit. These studies suggest a selective increase in the responsiveness of the grafted veins to serotonin. However, in both human cardiac and peripheral vascular operations, the saphenous, not the jugular, is the vein most frequently used. Thus the propriety of the rabbit model is unknown. ⋯ Human saphenous veins grafted into arterial circulation exhibit loss of endothelium-dependent relaxation to acetylcholine and diminished contractions to agonists (norepinephrine and serotonin). In contrast to rabbit data, serotonin elicits dose-dependent contractions in both human saphenous vein and human vein grafts. Since the vascular wall contractility varies widely across species, the relevance of rabbit vein graft data to human bypass grafts is uncertain.
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Intraoperative autotransfusion is frequently used in aortic surgery, despite the paucity of data regarding its safety and efficacy. This study was designed to compare whole blood autotransfusion with homologous transfusion for the replacement of blood lost during abdominal aortic procedures. ⋯ These data suggest that autotransfusion of unwashed, filtered blood is a safe and efficacious alternative to homologous blood replacement in patients undergoing major aortic reconstructive procedures.
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Occlusion of the common carotid artery (CCA) is generally associated with occlusion of the ipsilateral internal carotid artery (ICA) and external carotid artery (ECA). Occasionally, however, collateral circulation to the ECA may preserve patency of the ICA via retrograde perfusion through the bulb. These patients may suffer ongoing transient ischemic attacks and risk for stroke. Recognition of this pathologic variant may allow for effective surgical intervention. ⋯ Recognition of patent distal vessels above a CCA occlusion depends on a high index of suspicion, careful investigation of the carotid bulb with duplex scanning, and delayed arteriographic views of the bulb allowing for late collateral vessel filling. The favorable results in this small series of patients supports an aggressive surgical approach when patients with symptoms are encountered with patent distal vessels above an occluded CCA.
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Comparative Study
Value of lower extremity venous duplex examination in the diagnosis of pulmonary embolism.
This study tests the hypothesis that the absence of deep venous thrombosis (DVT) on lower extremity color-flow venous duplex examination (LECFD) combined with a non-high-probability ventilation/perfusion (V/Q) scanning results rules out pulmonary embolus (PE). The use of LECFD as a diagnostic aid for PE is based on data that show that 90% of PE originate from lower extremity DVT, and therefore on the assumption that PE cannot be present if DVT is not present as the source. ⋯ If treatment of suspected PE were based on LECFD alone or on duplex combined with V/Q scanning, 40% to 50% of patients with PE would remain untreated. In cases of suspected PE where these noninvasive tests do not confirm its presence, PA should be performed.