Substantial interest exists in the development of reperfusion and recanalization devices that would aid in the management of both peripheral vascular and coronary artery occlusive disease. Several of these devices are now in multicenter investigative trials. The atherolytic reperfusion wire incorporates a 0.035-inch guide wire with a modified tip to recanalize the lumen through the totally obstructed vascular segment. Clinical experience in the initial 12 patients has been successful. The Kensey catheter, a high-speed rotational recanalization device, has been used in 110 patients in a multicenter trial. Technical success has been reported in 77% of the patients and clinical success in 55% of the patients, with follow-up periods of 3 months to 1 year. The transluminal extraction catheter (TEC) is a torque-controlled atherectomy catheter that incorporates an aspiration device into a distal rotational cutter. Consequently, distal embolization has not been a clinical problem in the 95 patients treated with the TEC catheter for peripheral vascular disease. Technical success has been accomplished in 87 (92%) patients. Three-month follow-up studies in 16 patients showed that restenosis occurred in four, two of whom had undergone combined atherectomy and angioplasty.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1148/172.3.947 | DOI Listing |
Int J Artif Organs
June 2009
Pottstown Medical Specialists, Inc., Phoenixville, PA, USA.
Purpose: The purpose of the present study was to examine the effect of hemodialysis procedures on the hemoconcentration status of end-stage renal disease (ESRD) patients.
Methods: We measured whole blood viscosity (WBV) of 30 ESRD patients using a scanning-capillary-tube viscometer before and after hemodialysis. The blood sample size required for WBV measurements was approximately 3 mL.
Radiol Med
October 1993
Unità Operativa di Radiologia, Ospedale Regionale Valle d'Aosta.
Fifteen patients with chronic obstruction of leg arteries (mean length: 6 cm) were treated with the Kensey catheter and then with PTA. In 11 cases the procedure was successful (74%) and in 2 it was interrupted--in one case for dissection and in the other for vessel perforation. Two maneuvers, after dissection, were ended with PTA and stent placement (overall success rate: 87%).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBr J Radiol
June 1993
Radionuclide Department, Killingbeck Hospital, Leeds, UK.
Isotope limb blood flow studies were carried out using balloon, laser and Kensey catheter techniques to assess the outcome of peripheral angioplasty. Limb blood flow and Doppler ankle-brachial pressure measurements were obtained before angioplasty and at 6 months after angioplasty in a total of 101 angioplastied limbs: A fall in limb blood flow at 6 months was seen in 17% of the angioplastied limbs with no significant difference in the figures for the different types of angioplasty. Limb blood flow was also measured in 53 contralateral untreated limbs, approximately half of the patient group having both legs angioplastied.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCardiovasc Intervent Radiol
October 1992
Department of Diagnostic Radiology, Heinrich Heine University Düsseldorf, FRG.
The distribution and size of atheromatous debris after angioplasty with the Kensey catheter was determined after recanalization of 18 segments of human cadaveric superficial femoral arteries (SFA). The debris produced was studied cytologically and measured semiquantitatively. Nearly 80% of all particles ranged from 5 to 15 microns, approximately the size of red blood cells.
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