AI Article Synopsis

  • The study measured Doppler systolic ankle pressure and Pulse Volume Recording (PVR) in 40 patients with 72 limbs during surgery.
  • Control patients and those with abdominal aortic aneurysm (AAA) resections did not show significant decreases in Doppler systolic ankle/brachial pressure ratios, while AAA patients had slight decreases in PVR after declamping.
  • Femoropopliteal bypass showed a quick increase in PVR and DSAB levels, but results for extraanatomic (EA) and aortofemoral (AF) bypasses depended on the femoropopliteal segment's patency, indicating intraoperative monitoring can effectively assess surgical success.

Article Abstract

Seventy-two limbs in forty patients underwent Doppler systolic ankle pressure and Pulse Volume Recording (PVR) amplitude measurements intraoperatively. Control patients and patients undergoing abdominal aortic aneurysm (AAA) resections showed no significant decrease in Doppler systolic ankle/brachial pressure ratio (DSAB). PVR measurements were slightly decreased after declamping in the AAA patients. Femoropopliteal bypass was associated with a prompt increase in PVR and DSAB levels. In contrast, postreconstruction values in the extraanatomic (EA) and aortofemoral (AF) bypass groups were dependent upon the patency of the femoropopliteal segment. Intraoperative monitoring provides a quantitative assessment of the immediate success of arterial surgery.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/0002-9610(78)90034-xDOI Listing

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