Complete disruption of an expanded polytetrafluoroethylene (ePTFE) vascular graft is rare. This is a report of a case of a 70 year old man presenting with left shoulder dislocation, which was reduced immediately. Two weeks later, the patient presented with Rutherford 2b bilateral lower limb ischaemia related to the thrombosis of an ePTFE axillobifemoral bypass. The graft was implanted five years earlier for treatment of an aorto-enteric fistula secondary to an infected aortobifemoral bypass. A non-anastomotic pseudoaneurysm associated with complete disruption of the ePTFE graft was found. Systematic analysis of the explant showed that the rupture occurred at the level of a ringed external support and that ongoing tears also occurred on the posterior wall of the graft at the level of this external support. In conclusion, complete analysis of failure mechanisms even from an isolated report is mandatory.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ejvssr.2019.06.004 | DOI Listing |
EJVES Short Rep
July 2019
Groupe Européen de Recherche sur les Prothèses Appliquées à la Chirurgie Vasculaire, France.
Complete disruption of an expanded polytetrafluoroethylene (ePTFE) vascular graft is rare. This is a report of a case of a 70 year old man presenting with left shoulder dislocation, which was reduced immediately. Two weeks later, the patient presented with Rutherford 2b bilateral lower limb ischaemia related to the thrombosis of an ePTFE axillobifemoral bypass.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBratisl Lek Listy
December 1999
I. chirurgická klinika FN, I.P. Pavlova 67, 775 20 Olomouc.
The authors present their experience in late infection of aortoilliacofemoral reconstruction by means of the Dacron vascular prosthesis. They found such complication in 8 of 620 (1.5%) reconstructions in that region in period 1988-1998.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSurg Today
March 1997
Department of Cardiovascular Surgery, Iwaki Kyoritsu General Hospital, Fukushima, Japan.
We report herein the case of a 72-year-old man in whom a nonanastomotic pseudoaneurysm arose from a reinforced ringed expanded polytetrafluoroethylene (EPTFE) graft (Gore-Tex, Flagstaff, AZ, USA) following an axillobifemoral bypass. The pseudoaneurysm developed 2 years after graft insertion and induced graft thrombosis. The development of the pseudoaneurysm can be attributed to the fact that his axillobifemoral bypass graft was so short it deformed the proximal anastomosis, and the graft was subcutaneously tunneled onto the major pectoral muscle.
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