1. The surgical treatment of chronic intestinal ischemia: results of a recent series.
- Author
-
Illuminati G, Caliò FG, D'Urso A, Papaspiropoulos V, Mancini P, and Ceccanei G
- Subjects
- Adult, Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Arterial Occlusive Diseases complications, Chronic Disease, Female, Humans, Intestinal Diseases etiology, Ischemia complications, Male, Middle Aged, Treatment Outcome, Vascular Patency, Arterial Occlusive Diseases surgery, Celiac Artery, Intestinal Diseases surgery, Intestines blood supply, Ischemia surgery, Mesenteric Artery, Superior, Vascular Surgical Procedures methods
- Abstract
Due to the rarity of the condition, large and prospective series defining the optimal method of digestive arteries revascularization, for the treatment of chronic intestinal ischemia, are lacking. The aim of this consecutive sample clinical study was to test the hypothesis that flexible application of different revascularization methods, according to individual cases, will yield the best results in the management of chronic intestinal ischemia. Eleven patients, of a mean age of 56 years, underwent revascularization of 11 digestive arteries for symptomatic chronic mesenteric occlusive disease. Eleven superior mesenteric arteries and one celiac axis were revascularized. The revascularization techniques included retrograde bypass grafting in 7 cases, antegrade bypass grafting in 2, percutaneous arterial angioplasty in 1, and arterial reimplantation in one case. The donor axis for either reimplantation or bypass grafting was the infrarenal aorta in 4 cases, an infrarenal Dacron graft in 4, and the celiac aorta in one case. Grafting materials included 5 polytetrafluoroethylene (PTFE) and 3 Dacron grafts. Concomitant procedures included 3 aorto-ilio-femoral grafts and one renal artery revascularization. Mean follow-up duration was 31 months. There was no operative mortality. Cumulative survival rate was 88.9% at 36 months (SE 12.1%). Primary patency rate was 90% at 36 months (SE 11.6%). The symptom free rate was 90% at 36 months (SE 11.6%). Direct reimplantation, antegrade and retrograde bypass grafting, all allow good mid-term results: the choice of the optimal method depends on the anatomic and general patient's status. Associated infrarenal and renal arterial lesions can be safely treated in the same time of digestive revascularization. Angioplasty alone yields poor results and should be limited to patients at poor risk for surgery.
- Published
- 2004
- Full Text
- View/download PDF