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Innominate to contralateral brachial artery bypass via ministernotomy with anatomic tunneling for critical ischemia of the left upper extremity. | LitMetric

Objectives: Scarring from prior bypass surgery and irradiation may compromise revascularization options in critical ischemia due to underlying occlusive disease. Occlusive disease of the axillo-brachial artery is particularly difficult to revascularize under such hostile conditions.

Method: We present a case of a 58-year-old woman presenting with a painful, pulseless, and cool left upper extremity. The patient had a known history of left upper extremity occlusive disease which was managed by subclavian-axillary artery stenting with re-occlusion and subsequent extra-anatomic left carotid-to-proximal brachial artery prosthetic bypass, which was complicated by stroke. The patient had a history of left mastectomy, axillary node dissection, and external beam radiation therapy. When considering revascularization options, the combination of post-radiation changes and scarring of the conventional operative zones for revascularization posed a high risk for complications. We describe a novel approach for such revascularization, where the inflow source was the terminal brachiocephalic artery, outflow to the upper left brachial artery, with anatomic intrathoracic-to-axillary tunneling through the thoracic outlet after verifying the lack of dynamic extrinsic compression at that level.

Result: The procedure resulted in resolution of the symptoms and the patient continued to do well 2 years later.

Conclusion: This case shows that anatomic tunneling through the thoracic outlet can be a viable option for upper extremity revascularization when hostile conditions preclude other anatomic tunneling routes or extra-anatomic options.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1708538119899320DOI Listing

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