Retrograde iliofemoral endarterectomy facilitated by balloon angioplasty is a safe, easy-to-perform, and viable option for patients with combined external iliac artery and common femoral artery occlusive disease. Midterm results (36.4 months) are favorable, and most hemodynamic failures are easy to correct with standard endovascular techniques.
Endovascular therapy for TASC type B femoropopliteal lesions is safe and technically feasible. However, the length of time that a treated arterial segment remains free of stenosis is limited, and is not improved with adjunctive stenting. Recurrent stenosis, not occlusion, was the most common study end point, and few patients subsequently required surgical bypass. Predictors of outcome after endovascular therapy for TASC type B lesions were not identified in this study.
Ehlers-Danlos syndrome is a connective tissue disorder caused by abnormal collagen synthesis. Vascular complications, including aneurysm formation and spontaneous arterial perforations, are difficult to manage surgically and result in significant operative mortality due to blood vessel fragility. We describe the first reported successful endovascular abdominal aortic aneurysm repair in a patient with Ehlers-Danlos syndrome. We discuss the advantages endovascular surgery offers over open surgery in these patients. We believe that endovascular repair of abdominal aortic aneurysms preferentially over open repair merits consideration in patients with Ehlers-Danlos syndrome.
This retrospective review demonstrates that a carotid-axillary bypass constructed with ringed synthetic graft material tunneled under the clavicle performs well and can be considered a reasonable alternative to the more standard carotid-subclavian bypass for the same indications.
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