1. Tips and Tricks to Facilitate the Combined Iliofemoral Endarterectomy With Stenting for Heavily Calcified Common Femoral Artery Atherosclerosis With Involvement of the External Iliac Artery.
- Author
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Georgakarakos, Efstratios, Dimitriadis, Konstantinos, Parisidis, Stavros, Triantafyllou, Nikolaos, Argyriou, Christos, and Georgiadis, George S.
- Subjects
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ATHEROSCLEROSIS treatment , *MEDICAL care , *COST analysis , *ANGIOPLASTY , *SURGICAL stents , *ENDOVASCULAR surgery , *CATHETERIZATION , *ENDARTERECTOMY , *VASCULAR resistance , *ILIAC artery , *LIGAMENT injuries , *FEMORAL artery ,PREVENTION of surgical complications - Abstract
Background: Management of a heavily calcified atherosclerotic occlusive disease involving the common femoral artery (CFA) and external iliac artery (EIA), poses a surgical challenge. Though the current guidelines recommend open surgical therapy for such lesions, this approach is neither easy nor represents the current real-life practice. Purpose: To describe tips and tricks facilitating the hybrid technique for the management of distal iliofemoral atherosclerotic disease, where classic endarterectomy is inadequate or ill-performed. Technique: A contralateraly inserted guidewire reaches the distal iliac artery via the crossover technique and is directly retrieved from the femoral arteriotomy immediately after removal of the anterior plaque segment. The retrieved and secured guidewire enables extensive retrograde CFA endarterectomy over the wire with avusion proximally to the inguinal ligement, followed by patch arterioplasty. Externalizing the guidewire from the patch enables traction on it and facilitates advancement of the stent through tortuous or stenosed iliac vessels as well as accurate stent deployment to cover the margin of the EIA residual plaque. Moreover, this manipulation enables ipsilateral placement of a sheath and passage of a second, retrograde guidewire to perform kissing stenting in the common iliac vessels. Chronic thrombotic lesions require covered stents to avoid thrombus propagation and meticulous flushing before completion of the femoral patching. Conclusions: The combined iliofemoral endarterectomy with stenting does not require advanced endovascular skills and prevents complications associated with incomplete femoral endarterectomy. Extensive avulsion endarterectomy proximal to the inguinal ligament is efficiently and safely performed over a retrieved crossover guidewire, enabling precise residual stenting above the flexion site. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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