A 67-year-old male of Egyptian descent presented to the vascular outpatient clinic with a left lower limb pulsating mass in the mid-inner thigh region. A computed tomography angiography (CTA) revealed a 3x4cm left mid-superficial femoral artery (SFA) aneurysm and a 2x3cm aneurysm in the right mid-SFA. An open repair of the left, followed by right SFA aneurysms, was performed in a sequential matter, six weeks apart.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIntroduction And Importance: True ulnar artery aneurysms are a rare entity, with existing literature suggesting that most of these aneurysms are due to trauma. This case report sheds light on a true ulnar artery aneurysm that was deemed to be idiopathic.
Case Presentation: A 49-year-old lady presented with numbness in the medial 3 fingers of the left hand, tenderness over the medial forearm, and a palpable ulnar artery pulse.
Outflow venous obstruction is a common problem in patients with autogenous upper extremity hemodialysis access. Surgical revision to divert blood flow into the patent vein is sometimes possible to restore unobstructed flow. The result of this type of procedure is not yet well known.
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