Introduction End-stage renal disease (ESRD) is a condition that has seen a large increase in prevalence in recent decades. Paralleling this increase in prevalence is the increasing number of patients requiring vascular access for hemodialysis. Arteriovenous fistulas (AVFs) and arteriovenous grafts (AVGs) are considered the procedures of choice for hemodialysis access.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground And Purpose: In patients with metal-on-metal (MoM) hip prostheses, pain and joint effusions may be associated with elevated blood levels of cobalt and chromium ions. Since little is known about the kinetics of metal ion clearance from the body and the rate of resolution of elevated blood ion levels, we examined the time course of cobalt and chromium ion levels after revision of MoM hip replacements.
Patients And Methods: We included 16 patients (13 female) who underwent revision of a painful MoM hip (large diameter, modern bearing) without fracture or infection, and who had a minimum of 4 blood metal ion measurements over an average period of 6.
Fibrin sheaths are a heterogeneous matrix of cells and debris that form around catheters and are a known cause of central venous stenosis and catheter failure. A total of 50 cases of central venous catheter fibrin sheath angioplasty (FSA) after catheter removal or exchange are presented. A retrospective review of an outpatient office database identified 70 eligible patients over a 19-month period.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFDisordered copper metabolism may be important in the aetiology of Parkinsonism, as caeruloplasmin is a key enzyme in handling oxidative stress and is involved in the synthesis pathway of dopamine. The human Cu metabolism of ten Parkinsonism patients was compared to ten healthy controls with the aid of a stable (65)Cu isotope tracer. The analyses of blood serum (65)Cu/(63)Cu ratios yielded individual isotopic profiles, which indicate that the Cu metabolism is less controlled in patients with Parkinsonism.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBalloon angioplasty maturation is emerging as an important method to increase utilization and improve function of autogenous arteriovenous hemodialysis accesses (AVFs). Through the sequential dilation of small veins, large-diameter AVFs can be created with the inherent benefits of easier cannulation, greater overall surface area, improved patency, and fewer complications. A usable AVF can be created in a shorter amount of time, decreasing the need for dialysis catheters.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFObjective: Small-diameter veins are often a limiting factor for the successful creation of arteriovenous fistulas (AVFs). This study evaluated the use of intraoperative primary balloon angioplasty (PBA) as a technique to upgrade small-diameter veins during AVF creation. Sequential balloon angioplasty maturation (BAM) was evaluated as a technique to salvage failed fistulas, expedite maturation, and improve the patency of AVFs after PBA.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEvolution of endoluminal technologies, enhanced stent designs, and smaller delivery systems have increased the potential for using covered stents to treat the spectrum of traumatic arterial injuries. Improved stent-graft flexibility, reduced fracture potential, and a greater variety of lengths and diameters have increased the versatility for use in axillary and subclavian locations. Open repair of traumatic arterial injuries in the chest and shoulders can result in significant morbidity and mortality.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEndovascular therapy affords the opportunity to decrease surgical morbidity and improve operative planning in complex penetrating injuries of the chest. In this case report we describe a hemodynamically stable patient with a single gunshot wound to the base of the neck (zone I), with combined vascular and tracheal injuries. We present a novel approach to the repair of this type of injury using combined endovascular and open techniques.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground/purpose: Strictures of the esophagus and airway tract can be dilated if the strictures can be traversed and dilators passed. Unfortunately, using standard methods, not all strictures can be traversed. The authors set out to find a safe, expeditious, and reproducible way to traverse otherwise impassable strictures of the esophagus and airway.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: Chronic or recurrent leg ulceration occurs in 25% of sickle cell anemia patients, but not in the remaining 75%. Doppler studies of venous function were normal in 16 sickle cell anemia patients with leg ulcers.
Patients And Methods: Venous Duplex Ultrasound was used to study 33 sickle cell anemia patients with chronic leg ulcers.
Background: Uniplanar quantitative angiography (QA) is the standard method for measuring vessel diameter during surgical and endovascular procedures. Intravascular ultrasound (IVUS), a relatively new technology, is another means of obtaining this measurement. This study was designed to validate the accuracy of these two modalities by comparing each to direct caliper measurement, the gold standard, using phantom femoral artery segments (PAS).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFConcentrations of uric acid in carotid endarterectomy specimens in men and women were measured using high-performance liquid chromatography in comparison wo nonatherosclerotic control specimens.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe use of nonpenetrating clips (NPC) for vascular anastomosis is quickly becoming accepted. Studies attest to decreased anastomotic time, comparable patency rates, and decreased blood loss. Few human studies on the use of NPC have been done to date.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPurpose: To determine whether computed tomography (CT) alone can be used for excluding patients from endovascular repair for abdominal aortic aneurysms (AAA).
Methods: Among 71 patients evaluated for endovascular AAA repair using spiral CT imaging and angiography, 31 were selected who had both studies performed within 6 months of each other using a graduated measuring catheter or guidewire. Measurements of aneurysm neck diameter, neck length, and infrarenal aortic length were made from the CT and angiographic images using handheld calipers with calibration markers as guides.
Purpose: To report an examination of explanted bifurcated endovascular aortic grafts for histologic evidence of early healing and incorporation.
Method: Two bifurcated endovascular aortic grafts composed of polycarbonate urethane and Elgiloy wire were explanted 42 and 21 days after successful endovascular exclusion of abdominal aortic aneurysms. Both patients expired from causes unrelated to endograft deployment.
We report an unusual case of type IV Thoracoabdominal Aneurysm (TAA) with Superior Mesenteric Artery (SMA), celiac artery, and bilateral renal artery aneurysms in a patient who underwent an earlier repair of two infrarenal Abdominal Aortic Aneurysm (AAA) ruptures. Because of the presence of the visceral artery aneurysms and the earlier operation through the retroperitoneum, standard surgical treatment via a retroperitoneal approach with an inclusion grafting technique was considered difficult. A combined surgical approach achieving retrograde perfusion of all four visceral vessels and endovascular grafting allowing exclusion of the TAA was accomplished.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPurpose: To examine experimentally the feasibility of transfemoral endoluminal repair of aneurysms containing the ostia of essential branch arteries.
Methods: In a canine model (n = 4), suprarenal aortic aneurysms were created by suturing an artificial patch onto an anterior arteriotomy. Following a 2-week recovery period, the dogs underwent endovascular exclusion of their aneurysms using an aortic stent-graft with separate renal artery branch grafts.
The logical desire to avoid major cutaneous incisions and surgical dissection in the treatment of vascular occlusive disease has, in recent years, led to a surge of new therapeutic options whereby access to the diseased blood vessel is obtained via a distant site and treatment is effected from within the vessel. Such endoluminal treatment modalities include thrombolysis, balloon angioplasty, atherectomy, stenting, and stent grafting. For the purpose of this surgically oriented article, the latter two techniques are discussed.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPurpose: The medium molecular weight fraction of pentastarch (HES-Pz) has been shown to decrease reperfusion injury to myocardium and brain by reducing capillary leak. This study was undertaken to assess the effects of HES-Pz on neurologic function, microvascular permeability, and spinal cord infarction after temporary aortic cross-clamping in a rabbit model.
Methods: In 30 New Zealand White rabbits, a snare occlusion device was placed around the infrarenal aorta and tunneled into a subcutaneous position.
Neurologic injury is one of the most devastating complications of combined carotid and cardiac procedures. Although the cause of the deficit is usually embolic, the exact cause is often not apparent at the time of surgery. We present a complex case of combined carotid endarterectomy, innominate artery reconstruction, and coronary artery bypass procedures in which intraoperative monitoring with somatosensory evoked potentials and transcranial Doppler ultrasonography combined with postoperative acetazolamide single photon emission computed tomographic scans was used to correlate intraoperative events with cerebral activity and functional results.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFControversy exists over the value of intraoperative monitoring and shunting in patients undergoing carotid endarterectomy. Although it is widely believed that contralateral carotid occlusion and previous stroke mandate intraoperative shunting, the susceptibility of these two groups of patients to cerebral ischemia during carotid artery endarterectomy is not well defined. Somatosensory evoked potentials (SSEPs) were monitored in 113 carotid artery endarterectomy patients.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Thorac Cardiovasc Surg
May 1995
The postoperative fluid retention found in some patients after the Cox maze procedure has been attributed to surgically induced loss of atrial natriuretic peptide. We postulated that exogenous atrial natriuretic peptide could reverse this antidiuresis. A rat model was used to investigate this hypothesis.
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