Better endograft-stent apposition was achieved when using 30% endograft oversizing. Lower stent compression, but wider gutters, were observed with the Excluder stent-graft and V12 parallel stent, achieving maximum stent compression with the Endurant-Viabahn combination.
Exercises after arteriovenous fistula (AVF) creation may help to improve maturation; however, their usefulness has only been examined in indirect, non-comparative studies or small trials. Between June 2013 and November 2014, we included all ambulatory patients with stages 5-5D chronic kidney disease who were candidates for the creation of a native AVF in our center. After surgery, all patients were randomized to an exercise group or a control group with single-blind control. At 1 month postoperatively, clinical maturation (expert nurse inspection) and ultrasonographic maturation (flow >500 mL/min, venous diameter >5 mm and depth <6 mm) were assessed in all patients. A total of 72 patients were randomized, 3 were lost to follow-up, and 69 were finally analyzed. The mean age was 66.8 years (standard deviation 13.8), 70.0% were men, and 65.2% were in pre-dialysis. After surgery (42.0% had distal AVF), the patients were randomized (31 controls, 38 exercise group). At 1 month after surgery, global clinical and ultrasonographic maturation was assessed in 88.4% and 78.3% of AVF, respectively (kappa = 0.539). Non-significant differences in clinical or ultrasonographic maturation were seen between exercise and control group (94.7% vs. 80.6%, P = 0.069; 81.6% vs. 74.2%, P = 0.459). A stepwise logistic regression was performed to control previously analyzed asymmetrically distributed confounding factors (AVF localization), revealing that the exercise group showed greater clinical, but not ultrasonographic, maturation (odds ratio [OR] 5.861, 95% confidence interval: 1.006-34.146 and OR 2.403, 0.66-8.754). A postoperative controlled exercise program after AVF creation seems to increase 1-month clinical AVF maturation in distal accesses. Furthermore, exercise programs should be taken into account, especially in distal accesses.
Inflow artery aneurysmal degeneration can occur after long-term arteriovenous access. Surgical treatment by autogenous bypass exclusion in most cases (or ligation or end-to-end reconstructions in selected cases) is a safe and effective option.
Within the CEA cohort, 1 patient experienced a transient ischemic attack (0.9%), and 4 patients developed a postoperative neck hematoma for which repeat intervention was needed (3.6%). During follow-up, 3 patients (2.7%) developed symptomatic ipsilateral restenosis of the carotid artery, 2 of which within 90 days of CAS. These patients were all successfully treated with CAS. Complications such as myocardial infarction or cerebral hyperperfusion syndrome were not reported in the CAS and CEA groups.With these results, we believe that a temporary CAS first approach within our center is a safe and reasonable approach. Primary treatment with CAS could reduce the burden of care within hospitals and ensure adequate and timely care for this patient group during a time of limited capacity.
Better endograft stent apposition was usually attained when using 30% oversizing during two and three parallel-stent techniques. Higher oversizing was related to nonsignificant smaller gutters but higher rates of infolding. Smaller gutters, but higher stent compression and risk of infolding, were achieved with the Excluder-Viabahn than with the Endurant-BeGraft combination.
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