Management of Aortoiliac Reconstruction Complicated by Sepsis and Hemorrhage
- 25 June 1964
- journal article
- Published by Massachusetts Medical Society in New England Journal of Medicine
- Vol. 270 (26) , 1389-1391
- https://doi.org/10.1056/nejm196406252702604
Abstract
SEPSIS involving a vascular prosthesis, fortunately rare, is a most serious complication of arterial surgery. Although there are clinical and experimental examples of periprosthetic sepsis that have responded favorably to drainage, debridement, irrigation and systemic antibiotics1 2 3 4 5 6 7 the usual outcome of such sepsis is either thrombosis of the graft or, more commonly, bleeding from one of the vascular suture lines. When a suture line is involved in the septic process leakage, resulting in free bleeding or a false aneurysm, is inevitable. Once such leakage has occurred, several authors have shown the futility of any procedure that does not include interruption of . . .Keywords
This publication has 5 references indexed in Scilit:
- Clinical Experience with Management of the Infected Dacron GraftAnnals of Surgery, 1963
- Extraperitoneal thoracic aorta to femoral bypass graft as replacement for an infected aortic bifurcation prosthesisThe American Journal of Surgery, 1961
- Healing Complications with Plastic Arterial ImplantsArchives of Surgery, 1961
- Effects of Infection and Exposure on Synthetic Arterial ProsthesesArchives of Surgery, 1959
- Influence of Infection on Homografts and Synthetic (Teflon) GraftsA.M.A. Archives of Surgery, 1958