Background: Whether elective endovascular repair of abdominal aortic aneurysm reduces long-term morbidity and mortality, as compared with traditional open repair, remains uncertain.
Methods: We randomly assigned 881 patients with asymptomatic abdominal aortic aneurysms who were candidates for both procedures to either endovascular repair (444) or open repair (437) and followed them for up to 9 years (mean, 5.2).
Context: Limited data are available to assess whether endovascular repair of abdominal aortic aneurysm (AAA) improves short-term outcomes compared with traditional open repair.
Objective: To compare postoperative outcomes up to 2 years after endovascular or open repair of AAA in a planned interim report of a 9-year trial.
Design, Setting, And Patients: A randomized, multicenter clinical trial of 881 veterans (aged > or = 49 years) from 42 Veterans Affairs Medical Centers with eligible AAA who were candidates for both elective endovascular repair and open repair of AAA.
Perspect Vasc Surg Endovasc Ther
March 2009
Endovascular repair of abdominal and thoracic aortic aneurysms (AAAs and TAAs, respectively) has become the standard of care for anatomically appropriate patients. All the devices developed to date for endograft repair of AAAs and TAAs are deployed through relatively large (12F to 24F) sheaths. Traditionally, this access has required arterial exposure with open cut down, but with the development of suture-mediated arterial closure devices and decreasing profile of delivery sheaths of endografts, there is an increasing trend toward percutaneous endovascular repair of aortic aneurysms.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFHypothesis: Adjuvant massage therapy improves pain management and postoperative anxiety among many patients who experience unrelieved postoperative pain. Pharmacologic interventions alone may not address all of the factors involved in the experience of pain.
Design: Randomized controlled trial.
There are multiple endovascular options to achieve percutaneous revascularization of chronic superficial femoral artery (SFA) stenoses and occlusions. Most rely on forceful displacement of plaque via balloon angioplasty, either as a stand-alone therapy or supplemented by cold thermal injury (cryoplasty), microtome assistance (cutting balloon angioplasty), nitinol stent deployment, or expanded polytetrafluoroethylene-lined nitinol stent deployment. Excellent technical success rates are routinely described in the literature.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: Our aim was to determine whether suprarenal fixation in endografts compromises renal artery (RA) flow and whether subsequent RA intervention is precluded by the stent struts.
Methods: Prospectively acquired data from 104 patients with endovascular aneurysm repair (EVAR) of an abdominal aortic aneurysm using the Zenith endograft (Cook, Inc., Bloomington, IN) were analyzed.
Background: This study evaluated the type and need for angioplasty in 253 consecutive carotid endarterectomies.
Methods: Polyester knitted gelatin sealed patch (DP) and polytetrafluoroethylene (PTFE) patches were used in, respectively, 159 and 29 patients, with 65 vessels closed primarily (no patch [NP]).
Results: Surgical results, estimated blood loss, and surgical time were similar in each group.
Background: One adverse outcome of endovascular abdominal aortic aneurysm (AAA) repair (EVAR) is a significantly increased incidence of secondary interventions (SIs) required compared with traditional open aortic repair. We present a consecutive series of EVARs using a single endograft to identify the incidence and types of SIs performed.
Methods: From February 1, 2000, to January 31, 2005, we repaired 136 AAAs with the Zenith (Cook, Bloomington, Indiana) endograft.
Since the natural tendency of the aorta is to increase in diameter and tortuosity with age and since abdominal aortic aneurysms (AAAs) increase in diameter and length over time, encroaching on the renal and hypogastric orifices, early repair of AAAs (when > or =4.0 cm) may allow greater applicability of the endovascular option because of more favorable aortoiliac morphology. Patients who present at an older age with larger AAAs should be more likely to be anatomically excluded from endovascular AAA repair.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPurpose: We sought to review the diagnosis and treatment of children with lower extremity vascular injury.
Methods: We performed a query of our vascular surgery database from 1996 through 2002 to determine those with lower extremity vascular injuries requiring surgery who were also less than 13 years of age. Patient demographics, presentation, cause, surgical specifics, and outcome were sought.
Background: This study focused on 200 carotid endarterectomies (CEA) performed at our Veterans Administration Hospital (VAH) to determine whether 1-day hospitalization after CEA is safe and the degree to which it can be achieved.
Methods: Over 36 months, 200 CEAs were performed for asymptomatic stenosis (n = 104), transient ischemic attacks (n = 68), and stroke (n = 28). General anesthesia was used in 189 procedures.
Background: Current imaging modalities may not be able to detect endoleaks, differentiate between type II and type III, or localize inflow and outflow sources. We describe a new technique that can characterize endoleaks to guide secondary intervention.
Methods: One hundred four patients with Zenith (Cook, Inc.
Ehlers-Danlos type IV is a major concern to vascular surgeons because it is often associated with spontaneous hemorrhage from arteries containing decreased type III collagen. Five members of a family with Ehlers-Danlos type IV and a review of another family of five with Ehlers-Danlos type IV are reported. Evaluation of the recent family included clinical evaluation as well as assay of collagen production.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPurpose: Acetazolamide (ACZ)-enhanced single photon emission computed tomography (SPECT) scans can assess both cerebral perfusion and vascular reactivity. Patients with asymptomatic critical carotid artery stenosis were evaluated for cerebral vascular reactivity to determine the effect of extracranial occlusive disease and the effect of carotid endarterectomy (CEA) on intracerebral reactivity.
Methods: In 44 patients with asymptomatic critical carotid artery stenosis, cerebral perfusion and vascular reactivity were assessed before CEA with resting and ACZ-enhanced SPECT scans.
The clinical presentation of patients with acute lower-limb ischemia and primary aortic thrombus prompted this review. Following recognition of the first case in early 1994, relevant patients (n = 6) were kept in a database and were reviewed for presentation, treatment, and follow-up. The median age was 41 and five patients were male.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIntraluminal arterial stenting for the management of arterial occlusive disease of the lower extremities has evolved over the years. Most stents are used to correct inadequacies of PTA or to correct a PTA complication. These include (1) restenosis within 90 days of PTA, (2) chronic iliac occlusion, (3) acute occlusions during PTA, (4) a significant residual gradient following PTA, (5) dissections longer than the angioplasty site, and (6) a 30% or greater residual stenosis after PTA.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPurpose: We present a review of 35 patients who underwent an operation for subclavian (n = 18) or axillary (n = 17) vessel injury. In some patients, both an artery and a vein were damaged, resulting in a total of 30 arterial and 16 venous injuries.
Methods: The wounding source included a gunshot (n = 19), a stab wound (n = 9,) and blunt trauma (n = 7).
Purpose: To evaluate the patency and hemodynamic impact of a cryopreserved allograft venous valve transplanted to the superficial femoral vein (SFV) of a canine insufficiency model aided by a distal arteriovenous fistula (dAVF).
Methods: Eight greyhounds had intravenous hemodynamic parameters measured (venous filling time [VFT], 90% of venous refilling time [VRT90], and simulated ambulatory venous pressure [AVP]) before (T0) and after complete hindlimb venous valvulotomy (T1) to produce venous insufficiency. Simultaneously, a valve-containing vein segment was harvested from the opposite SFV or external jugular vein (n = 1) and cryopreserved.
Primary arteriovenous fistulae remain the gold standard for hemodialysis access. The radiocephalic or Brescia-Cimino fistula is the autologous fistula of choice, with a primary success rate of nearly 93% and a 1-year patency rate of up to 82%. Alternative arteriovenous fistulae include the snuff box fistula and a brachiobasilic fistula with a 1-year patency rate of up to 90%.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground And Methods: In 64 patients, cerebral perfusion and vascular reactivity were assessed before and after carotid endarterectomy (CEA) using acetazolamide (ACZ)-enhanced single photon emission computer tomography (SPECT). Twenty-five patients were asymptomatic, whereas the remainder were symptomatic. Sixty-one patients had a > or = 70% ipsilateral internal carotid artery stenosis.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Vasc Interv Radiol
April 1997
Purpose: To determine the accuracy of two-dimensional (2D) time-of-flight (TOF) magnetic resonance (MR) angiography, performed with state-of-the-art equipment, in the evaluation of the iliac arteries.
Materials And Methods: The iliac arteries of 50 patients undergoing conventional arteriography for evaluation of lower-extremity ischemia or abdominal aortic aneurysm were also imaged with axial 2D TOF MR angiography. Blinded interpretations of conventional arteriograms and MR angiograms were compared.
Renal and visceral artery images obtained concurrently with spiral CT and conventional arteriography were compared for 32 patients. Indications for imaging were occlusive disease (n = 12), aneurysmal disease (n = 9), and renal or visceral artery disease (n = 11). Conventional arteriography enabled visualization of 64 renal arteries and 15 accessory renal arteries.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPurpose: To develop a magnetic resonance (MR) angiography protocol, with use of breath-hold techniques, for simultaneous aortoiliac inflow assessment and renal artery screening in patients with lower extremity ischemia or aortic aneurysm.
Materials And Methods: Breath-hold three dimensional gadolinium-enhanced MR angiography was performed in 50 patients (conventional arteriography in 47 was the standard of reference). After multiple strategies were tested in the first 18 patients, a final protocol was formulated and tested in the subsequent 32 patients.
Background: Thirty-eight limbs with iliac occlusive disease were treated with Palmaz stents from 1987 through 1991.
Methods: Indications for stent utilization included dissection induced by percutaneous transluminal balloon angioplasty (PTA) (10), restenosis after PTA (nine), post-PTA residual stenosis (nine), multiple stenoses or occlusion (five), and unfavorable location (five).
Results: The ankle/brachial pressure index increased from 0.