Cardiovascular surgery (London, England)
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Case Reports
Coronary artery bypass grafting in a patient with type II heparin associated thrombopenia.
Two types of heparin-associated thrombopenia can be distinguished. Patients with the type II condition present a particularly difficult management problem when they require full anticoagulation. There is no consensus about the proper anticoagulation management for type II patients who have to undergo cardiopulmonary bypass. ⋯ Sodium-danaparoid was used for anticoagulation. The anti-factor Xa level was kept below the value reported in the literature for patients undergoing cardiopulmonary bypass. No fibrin formation was observed during the time of cardiopulmonary bypass, nor was any severe postoperative haemorrhage seen, as is frequently described in the literature.
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Patency of infrainguinal polytetrafluoroethylene bypass grafts with distal interposition vein cuffs.
Polytetrafluoroethylene (PTFE) prosthetic bypasses in the lower extremity have poor patency rates, particularly in limb salvage cases. Patency and limb salvage rates of PTFE bypasses supplemented by distal interposition vein cuffs were assessed in patients requiring revascularization for critical limb ischemia, in the absence of a suitable autologous saphenous vein. Between October 1993 and April 1996, 163 patients underwent 185 infrainguinal bypasses. ⋯ Adjunctive use of distal interposition vein cuffs improves prosthetic graft patency, while producing satisfactory limb salvage. Postoperative anticoagulation did not influence graft patency. PTFE/vein cuff for lower-extremity revascularization shows good 2-year patency and is an acceptable alternate conduit in patients with critical limb ischemia when autologous saphenous vein is absent.