1. Short- and Long-Term Results of Operative Iliac Artery Release in Endurance Athletes
- Author
-
Martijn van Hooff, Marieke M.J.M. Hegge, Mart H.M. Bender, Maarten J.A. Loos, Alberto Brini, Hans H.H.C.M. Savelberg, Marc R.M. Scheltinga, Goof Schep, Nutrition and Movement Sciences, RS: NUTRIM - R1 - Obesity, diabetes and cardiovascular health, and RS: SHE - R1 - Research (OvO)
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,Long-term results ,LEG COMPLAINTS ,CLAUDICATION ,Constriction, Pathologic ,Intermittent Claudication ,DIAGNOSIS ,Iliac Artery ,RECOGNIZING VASCULAR CAUSES ,VALIDATION ,Endofibrosis ,Young Adult ,Treatment Outcome ,FLOW LIMITATIONS ,Athletes ,Cyclists ,Iliac kinking ,Physical Endurance ,Endurance athletes ,Humans ,Female ,Surgery ,KINKING ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine - Abstract
Endurance athletes can develop intermittent claudication due to sports-related flow limitations of the iliac artery (FLIA) caused by arterial kinking. In the present study, we investigated the short- and long-term efficacy of an operative release for iliac artery kinking.Between 1996 and 2015, all patients with a diagnosis of FLIA due to iliac artery kinking without substantial arterial stenosis (15%) or an excessive arterial length (vessel length to straight ratio, 1.25) who had undergone surgery were included. The short-term follow-up protocol consisted of cycling tests, the ankle brachial index with a flexed hip, and Doppler echography examinations to determine the peak systolic velocity before and 6 to 18 months after surgery. Additionally, the short- and long-term efficacy were evaluated using questionnaires.A total of 142 endurance athletes (155 legs; 88.4% male; median age, 26 years; interquartile range [IQR], 22-31 years) were available for analysis. In the short term, the symptoms had decreased in 83.9% of the patients, with an overall 80.3% satisfaction rate. Power during a maximal cycling test had improved from 420 W (IQR, 378-465 W) to 437 W (IQR, 392-485 W; P .001). The symptom-free workload had increased from 300 W (IQR, 240-340 W) to 400 W (IQR, 330-448 W; P .001). The postexercise ankle brachial index with a flexed hip had increased from 0.53 (IQR, 0.40-0.61) to 0.57 (IQR, 0.47-0.64; P = .002), and the peak systolic velocity with a flexed hip had decreased from 1.88 m/s (IQR, 1.45-2.50 m/s) to 1.52 m/s (IQR, 1.19-2.07 m/s; P .001). Postoperative imaging studies revealed some degree kinking in 33.9%, mostly asymptomatic. The long-term results were evaluated after a median of 15.2 years (IQR, 10.9-19.5 years). The athletes had cycled an additional 125.500 km (IQR, 72.00-227.500 km), which was approximately equal to the 131.000 km (IQR, 98.250-220.000 km) cycled before the diagnosis of FLIA. On the long term, 63.9% of the athletes reported persistent reduction of complaints, with an overall 59.1% satisfaction rate. Eight patients had required reintervention, six because of treatment failure and two because of newly developed FLIA.Operative iliac artery release for sports-related functional kinking in the absence of stenosis or an excessive vessel length was effective for most athletes in the short and long term.
- Published
- 2022