The final place of LSG in bariatric surgery is still unclear, but our results and those of others show that LSG can be a viable alternative to established procedures.
To determine whether long-term oral anticoagulant treatment was effective in improving graft performance and preventing major amputation following vein bypass surgery for femoropopliteal atherosclerosis, a clinical trial was conducted in one single center and continued during 10 years. After 130 patients had electively received a femoropopliteal vein graft, they were randomly assigned to a therapy group (treatment with phenprocoumon [n = 66]) or to a control group (n = 64) that remained without any anticoagulant treatment. Primary end points of the study were graft reocclusion and limb loss. The median durations of primary patency and limb salvage were significantly longer for treated patients than that for controls. In addition, survival in the therapy group was longer. Following autologous vein bypass surgery in the treated group, the results were superior in terms of graft patency, limb salvage, and survival.
Background/Aim: Local blood flow failure (no-reflow phenomenon) during ischemia/reperfusion (I/R) injury may be mediated by interstitial edema formation (passive vasoconstriction) and/or microvascular spasm (active vasoconstriction). The development of the no-reflow phenomenon in the rabbit hind limb I/R model and the influence of treatment with L-arginine and/or antioxidative vitamins were investigated. Methods: Untreated rabbits were compared with those treated with L-arginine (4 mg/kg/min) or antioxidative vitamins (0.4 ml/kg) alone or in combination during hind limb I/R (2.5/2 h). Interstitial edema formation and microvessel diameter alterations were measured morphometrically. Capillary blood perfusion was measured continuously with laser Doppler flowmetry. Results: I/R injury was expressed by interstitial edema formation (interstitial space increase by 80%), microvascular constriction (microvessel cross-sectional area decrease by 30%), and development of no-reflow phenomenon (blood flow reduction by 60%). Treatment with antioxidative vitamins alone or L-arginine alone reduced interstitial edema by 22 and 31%, consequently, while combined L-arginine/antioxidative vitamin treatment showed a more pronounced edema reduction by 40%. Treatment with only antioxidative vitamins failed to influence the development of no-reflow, although interstitial edema formation was reduced. L-Arginine treatment alone or in combination with antioxidative vitamins prevented microvascular constriction and preserved blood flow after reperfusion without development of no-reflow despite still apparent interstitial edema. Conclusions: Affections of active vasomotility and not merely passive changes of external pressure (i.e., interstitial edema formation) should be considered important in the development of microvascular constriction during ‘no-reflow’ phenomenon.
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