Surgical Correction of Subclavian Steal Syndrome
- 1 January 1979
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Taylor & Francis in Scandinavian Journal of Thoracic and Cardiovascular Surgery
- Vol. 13 (3) , 315-320
- https://doi.org/10.3109/14017437909100571
Abstract
Eleven patients with subclavian steal syndrome underwent surgical correction without mortality. Ten patients were relieved from their symptoms. Two vessels reoccluded, two months and three years postoperatively, with reappearance of symptoms. One patient was hemiplegic after the operation. Associated lesions of other precerebral vessels were found in 7 patients, and surgical correction of two or three stenosed or occluded arteries was performed in 5 of them. Satisfactory and complete preoperative angiographic study of all precerebral vessels is therefore important. In 4 patients studied, the vertebral artery flow changed from a mean retrograde flow of 91 ml/min to a mean forward flow of 64 ml/min.This publication has 8 references indexed in Scilit:
- The Steal SyndromesAnnual Review of Medicine, 1975
- Axillary-Axillary Artery Bypass for the Correction of Subclavian Artery Occlusive DiseaseAnnals of Surgery, 1974
- Carotid-subclavian bypass grafts for subclavian artery diseaseThe American Journal of Surgery, 1973
- Joint Study of Extracranial Arterial OcclusionJAMA, 1972
- The subclavian steal syndromeThe Journal of Thoracic and Cardiovascular Surgery, 1966
- Brachial‐basilar insufficiency syndromeNeurology, 1962
- A New Vascular Syndrome — The Subclavian StealNew England Journal of Medicine, 1961
- Reversal of Blood Flow through the Vertebral Artery and Its Effect on Cerebral CirculationNew England Journal of Medicine, 1961