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Midterm experience with the endovascular treatment of isolated iliac aneurysms

Sanchez, L A; Patel, A V; Ohki, T; Suggs, W D; Wain, R A; Valladares, J; Cynamon, J; Rigg, J; Veith, F J
PURPOSE: This report describes our 5-year experience with the endovascular repair of isolated iliac aneurysms and pseudoaneurysms. METHODS: Between June 1993 and July 1998, 40 isolated iliac aneurysms and pseudoaneurysms were treated with endovascular grafts in 39 patients. Thirty-seven aneurysms were treated with endovascular grafts composed of polytetrafluoroethylene grafts and balloon expandable stents, and the other three underwent repair with a polycarbonate urethane endoluminal graft. RESULTS: All the patients underwent initially successful endovascular treatment of isolated iliac aneurysms and pseudoaneurysms and were followed from 1 to 51 months (mean, 18 months). The 4-year primary patency rate was 94.5% +/- 10%. The perioperative complications included one episode of distal embolization, an episode of colonic ischemia, five episodes of kinking or compression of the endovascular graft, and one early postoperative graft thrombosis. There was only one perioperative death in a patient whose aneurysm ruptured in the operating room just before endovascular repair. The median postoperative length of hospital stay was 3.0 +/- 1.3 days in this group of patients at moderate and high risk. The long-term complications included one graft thrombosis and two endoleaks. One small endoleak was followed until the patient died of unrelated causes, and the other one led to aneurysm rupture in the only patient temporarily lost to follow-up examination. This patient successfully underwent treatment in the standard open surgical fashion. To date, all the other aneurysms have remained stable or have decreased in size during the follow-up examinations with duplex or contrast-enhanced computed tomographic scans. CONCLUSION: Endovascular repair of iliac aneurysms and pseudoaneurysms is a safe and effective technique with good midterm results in patients at standard and high risk. These grafts are particularly beneficial for patients with medical, surgical, or anatomic contraindications for open surgical repair
PMID: 10550189
ISSN: 0741-5214
CID: 79589

Reply [Letter]

Wain RA; Veith FJ
PMID: 10514246
ISSN: 0741-5214
CID: 79586

Analysis of endovascular graft treatment for aortoiliac occlusive disease: what is its role based on midterm results?

Wain, R A; Veith, F J; Marin, M L; Ohki, T; Suggs, W D; Cynamon, J; Goldsmith, J; Sanchez, L A
OBJECTIVE: To analyze the authors' midterm results (up to 4 years) using endovascular grafts to treat aortoiliac occlusive disease in patients with limb-threatening ischemia. SUMMARY BACKGROUND DATA: Endovascular grafts are being used to manage some aortoiliac lesions formerly treated by aortofemoral or extraanatomic bypass grafts. However, widespread acceptance of these new grafts depends on their late patency and clinical utility. METHODS: Between January 1993 and December 1997, 52 patients with aortoiliac occlusive disease were treated with endovascular grafts. The primary indication for treatment was gangrene or ulceration in 42 patients (81%) and rest pain in 10 patients (19%). Sixteen patients had symptomatic contralateral limbs that were also treated, and 27 (52%) patients required a synchronous infrainguinal bypass. Results up to 4 years were evaluated by life table analysis. RESULTS: Forty-six (88%) of the patients had complete follow-up of 3 to 57 months (median 22 months). Six patients were lost to follow-up at a mean of 20 months after surgery. The 4-year primary and secondary patency rates for the endovascular grafts were 66.1% and 72.3% respectively. Six patients required a major amputation, and the limb salvage rate was 88.7%. Four-year patient survival was 37%, with 23 patients dying during this follow-up period. CONCLUSIONS: Endovascular grafts can often be used when conventional procedures are contraindicated or technically impractical. These grafts are a valuable alternative to extraanatomic and aortofemoral bypasses in high-risk patients with aortoiliac occlusive disease and critical ischemia
PMCID:1420856
PMID: 10450727
ISSN: 0003-4932
CID: 79582

Angiographic criteria reliably predict when carotid endarterectomy can be safely performed without a shunt - Invited commentary - Reply [Editorial]

Wain, RA
ISI:000081230900021
ISSN: 1072-7515
CID: 3499852

Angiographic criteria reliably predict when carotid endarterectomy can be safely performed without a shunt

Wain, R A; Veith, F J; Berkowitz, B A; Legatt, A D; Schwartz, M; Lipsitz, E C; Haut, S R; Bello, J A
BACKGROUND: Selective shunting during carotid endarterectomy is widely performed, but the optimal approach for predicting when a shunt is unnecessary remains uncertain. We evaluated the ability of preoperative cerebral angiography to predict when carotid endarterectomy could be safely performed without a shunt. STUDY DESIGN: Eighty-seven patients undergoing carotid endarterectomy between August 1991 and December 1997 had preoperative cerebral angiograms. The angiograms were evaluated for the presence of collateral flow from the contralateral carotid through the anterior communicating artery and from the posterior circulation through the posterior communicating artery. Patients then underwent endarterectomy and were selectively shunted based on somatosensory evoked potential changes. Internal carotid artery stump pressure was routinely measured in all patients. RESULTS: Nine patients (10%) had a shunt placed based on somatosensory evoked potential changes and none of the 87 patients had a perioperative (30 days) stroke. Angiography revealed that 36 patients (41%) had no cross-filling from the contralateral carotid through the anterior communicating artery. Nine of these patients (25%) required a shunt; none of the 51 patients with adequate cross-filling (p < 0.001) did. Furthermore, 94% of the patients without cross-filling but with a patent ipsilateral posterior communicating artery did not require a shunt using somatosensory evoked potential changes as the standard for shunt insertion. Stump pressure measurements (> or = 25 mmHg) or (> or = 50 mmHg) did not reliably exclude the need for a shunt. Only 2 of 15 patients with contralateral carotid occlusion and 1 of 16 patients with a prior ipsilateral stroke required shunts. CONCLUSIONS: In the presence of cross-filling from the contralateral carotid artery, shunt insertion was uniformly unnecessary. In addition, routine shunting of patients with previous ipsilateral strokes or contralateral carotid occlusion was not always necessary. Stump pressures were less sensitive than angiographic criteria in determining when a shunt was unnecessary. Evaluation of cross-filling from the contralateral carotid artery on preoperative angiography can predict with certainty which patients will not require a shunt
PMID: 10401745
ISSN: 1072-7515
CID: 79578

Endovascular graft repair of ruptured aortoiliac aneurysms

Ohki, T; Veith, F J; Sanchez, L A; Cynamon, J; Lipsitz, E C; Wain, R A; Morgan, J A; Zhen, L; Suggs, W D; Lyon, R T
BACKGROUND: The feasibility of endovascular graft (EVG) repair of ruptured aortoiliac aneurysms (AIAs) has yet to be demonstrated. There are inherent limitations in EVG repair, including the need for preoperative measurements of the aneurysmal and adjacent arterial anatomy to determine the appropriate size and type of graft and the inherent delay to obtain proximal occlusion. We developed an EVG system with broad versatility that largely eliminates these problems. STUDY DESIGN: Between 1993 and 1998, within an experience of 134 endovascular AIA repairs, 12 ruptured AIAs were treated using EVGs that facilitated intraoperative customization and eliminated the need for preoperative measurements. The EVGs consisted of either a Palmaz stent and a PTFE graft deployed by a compliant balloon (n = 9) or a self-expanding covered stent graft (n = 3). Both grafts were cut to the appropriate length intraoperatively. The mean age of the patients was 72 years (range 40 to 86 years). The mean size of the aneurysms was 7.6 cm (range 3 to 16 cm). Preoperative symptoms were present in all patients and included abdominal or back pain (n = 9), syncope (n = 4), and external bleeding (n = 2). All patients were high surgical risks because of comorbid disease (n = 10) or previous abdominal operations (n = 6), and nine experienced hypotension. RESULTS: All EVGs were inserted successfully and excluded the aneurysms from the circulation. The mean operating time was 263 minutes, the mean blood loss was 715 mL, and the mean length of hospital stay was 6.5 days. There were two deaths (16%), one from the preexisting acute myocardial infarction and one from multiple organ failure. There were three minor complications (25%). Two patients required evacuation of an intraabdominal hematoma from the initial rupture. All but one of the grafts was functioning at a mean followup of 18 months. CONCLUSIONS: This study demonstrates the feasibility of EVG repair for ruptured AIAs using a graft that can be customized intraoperatively for each patient. Such repairs currently are valuable in patients with ruptured AIAs and serious comorbidities and may be applicable in other circumstances as well
PMID: 10401746
ISSN: 1072-7515
CID: 79579

Use of digital cine-fluoroscopy and catheter-directed techniques to improve and simplify standard vascular procedures

Wain, R A; Veith, F J
Digital cine-fluoroscopy and catheter-directed treatments have become indispensable tools in the armamentarium of surgeons performing vascular procedures. These new technologies not only improve and simplify the performance of standard vascular operations but also allow surgeons to perform a wide range of interventions previously unavailable in the operating room
PMID: 10410683
ISSN: 0039-6109
CID: 79580

Can duplex scan arterial mapping replace contrast arteriography as the test of choice before infrainguinal revascularization? Discussion [Editorial]

Moneta, GL; Wain, RA; Ascher, E; Zwolak, RM; Ahn, SS
ISI:000078016500021
ISSN: 0741-5214
CID: 3499822

The Montefiore experience with endovascular grafts for aneurysms and other arterial lesions

Chapter by: Veith, FJ; Ohki, T; Sanchez, LA; Cynamon, J; Suggs, WD; Wain, RA
in: 13TH CONGRESS OF THE EUROPEAN CHAPTER OF THE INTERNATIONAL UNION OF ANGIOLOGY by ; Bastounis, EA
40128 BOLOGNA : MEDIMOND S R L, 1999
pp. 117-120
ISBN: *************
CID: 3499922

Can duplex scan arterial mapping replace contrast arteriography as the test of choice before infrainguinal revascularization?

Wain, R A; Berdejo, G L; Delvalle, W N; Lyon, R T; Sanchez, L A; Suggs, W D; Ohki, T; Lipsitz, E; Veith, F J
PURPOSE: Arteriography is the diagnostic test of choice before lower extremity revascularization, because it is a means of pinpointing stenotic or occluded arteries and defining optimal sites for the origin and termination of bypass grafts. We evaluated whether a duplex ultrasound scan, used as an alternative to arteriography, could be used as a means of accurately predicting the proximal and distal anastomotic sites in patients requiring peripheral bypass grafts and, therefore, replace standard preoperative arteriography. METHODS: Forty-one patients who required infrainguinal bypass grafts underwent preoperative duplex arterial mapping (DAM). Based on these studies, an observer blinded to the operation performed predicted what operation the patient required and the best site for the proximal and distal anastomoses. These predictions were compared with the actual anastomotic sites chosen by the surgeon. RESULTS: Whether a femoropopliteal or an infrapopliteal bypass graft was required was predicted correctly by means of DAM in 37 patients (90%). In addition, both anastomotic sites in 18 of 20 patients (90%) who had femoropopliteal bypass grafts and 5 of 21 patients (24%) who had infrapopliteal procedures were correctly predicted by means of DAM. CONCLUSION: DAM is a reliable means of predicting whether patients will require femoropopliteal or infrapopliteal bypass grafts, and, when a patient requires a femoropopliteal bypass graft, the actual location of both anastomoses can also be accurately predicted. Therefore, DAM appears able to replace conventional preoperative arteriography in most patients found to require femoropopliteal reconstruction. Patients who are predicted by means of DAM to require crural or pedal bypass grafts should still undergo preoperative contrast studies to confirm these results and to more precisely locate the anastomotic sites
PMID: 9882794
ISSN: 0741-5214
CID: 80004