Five patients are reported who failed to heal ischemic foot wounds despite patient, functioning in situ saphenous vein grafts to infrapopliteal arteries. All were diabetic and two died before amputation could be performed. Contributing to this paradoxical failure of attempted limb salvage were: (a) extensive preexistent gangrene, (b) infection and failure of wound management, and (c) occlusive disease in runoff beds despite the distal site of anastomosis. Distal occlusive disease included one or more of the following: (a) stenosis in a named artery of the foot, (b) stenosis of collaterals from the peroneal artery, and (c) incomplete pedal arches. Distal in situ saphenous vein bypass should continue to be broadly applied for limb salvage, but careful judgement in patient selection and attention to the management of the ischemic wound itself remain critical to success.
Download full-text PDF |
Source |
---|
J Vasc Surg
December 2024
Division of Vascular Surgery, Department of Surgery, Henry Ford Hospital, Detroit, USA. Electronic address:
Objective: The impact of great saphenous vein harvest technique on infrainguinal bypass outcomes remains a matter of debate, with no robust evidence favoring a specific technique over the other. This study aims to compare the outcomes of open vein harvest with endoscopic vein harvest in patients undergoing infrainguinal bypass surgery.
Methods: Patients who underwent an infrainguinal bypass from a femoral origin using a single-segment great saphenous vein between 2011 and 2023 were identified in the Vascular Quality Initiative infrainguinal bypass module.
Asian Cardiovasc Thorac Ann
November 2024
Department of Cardiac Surgery, Asahikawa Medical University, Asahikawa, Japan.
Redo coronary artery bypass grafting after an right internal thoracic artery graft to the left anterior descending artery is challenging. For such a 52-year-old male patient with a history of mediastinitis, we performed redo bypass grafting of the right coronary artery using a saphenous vein graft and xiphoid resection via the suprasternal route with the left axillary artery as the inflow source and the graft were patent. The axillary artery is an inflow source for patients with inaccessible aorta.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Chest Surg
January 2025
Department of Cardiothoracic Surgery, Catharina Hospital, Eindhoven, The Netherlands.
Background: This study presents an overview of our technique and the perioperative outcomes for the first 100 patients who underwent minimally invasive endoscopic-assisted off-pump multivessel bypass grafting (endoscopic coronary artery bypass [endo-CAB]) at the Catharina Hospital in Eindhoven.
Methods: The first 100 patients undergoing multivessel endo-CAB from May 2022 to March 2024 were included in this retrospective, single-center, observational study (N=100). The study encompassed both elective and urgent surgical revascularization.
Biomater Adv
December 2024
School of Materials Science and Engineering, Beijing Institute of Technology, Beijing, China. Electronic address:
A high vascular patency was realized in the bulk or surface heparinized small-diameter in situ tissue-engineered vascular grafts (TEVGs) via a rabbit carotid artery replacement model in our previous studies. Those surface heparinized TEVGs could reduce the occurrence of aneurysms, but with a low level of the remodeled elastin, whereas those bulk heparinized TEVGs displayed a faster degradation and an increasing occurrence of aneurysms, but with a high level of the regenerated elastin. To combine the advantages of the bulk and surface graft heparinization to boost the remodeling of elastin and defer the occurrence of aneurysms, a coaxial electro-spinning technique was used to fabricate a kind of small-diameter core/shell fibrous structural in situ TEVGs with a faster degradable poly(lactic-co-glycolic acid) (PLGA) as a core layer and a relatively lower degradable poly(ε-caprolactone) (PCL) as a shell layer followed by the surface heparinization.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Vasc Surg Cases Innov Tech
August 2024
Division of Cardiovascular Surgery, Queen's University, Kingston Health Sciences Centre, Kingston, Ontario, Canada.
Arterial reconstruction with the great saphenous vein is a frequently performed vascular surgery technique for revascularization of chronic limb threatening ischemia. Surgeon variations of the procedure are common and aim to balance patency, limb salvage, complications, hospital resources, and technical feasibility. We describe a minimally invasive revascularization option using endoscope assistance for in situ great saphenous vein-arterial bypass to treat infrainguinal occlusive disease.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEnter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!