Arterial occlusive disease of the upper extremity

Scandinavian Journal of Thoracic and Cardiovascular Surgery
H Rostad, K V Hall

Abstract

Twenty-five upper extremities were operated upon in 24 patients because of arterial occlusive disease. Transthoracic endarterectomy was performed in 4 patients with short central occlusions of the subclavian artery. In the remaining patients, various bypass procedures were performed using reversed autogenous veins or prosthetic grafts. There were 2 early and 6 late deaths. One prosthetic graft had to be removed 2 months after the operation because of infection. At follow-up, 9 months to 17 years after surgery, 11 bypass grafts were patent. One vein graft and one prosthetic graft had occluded. The surgical technique, types of graft to be used, and the relation to long-term patency are briefly discussed.

References

Aug 1, 1976·American Journal of Surgery·W S MooreJ Goldstone
Mar 1, 1977·American Journal of Surgery·H B ShumackerE B Fitzgerald

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Citations

Jan 1, 1992·European Journal of Vascular Surgery·H W Kniemeyer, W Sandmann
Jan 1, 1993·Annals of Vascular Surgery·R M Fujitani, J L Mills
Dec 1, 1988·Journal of Cerebral Blood Flow and Metabolism : Official Journal of the International Society of Cerebral Blood Flow and Metabolism·K Bian, N Toda

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