Deep Veins of the Leg as Femoropopliteal Bypass Grafts
- 1 September 1981
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Medical Association (AMA) in Archives of Surgery
- Vol. 116 (9) , 1141-1145
- https://doi.org/10.1001/archsurg.1981.01380210025005
Abstract
• Deep leg veins were used as femoropopliteal grafts in 13 patients threatened with limb loss (average age, 77.5 years). Runoff was poor in ten patients, and three required transmetatarsal amputations. Early limb salvage was achieved in all cases. Nine (69%) of 13 grafts were either patent when last examined (four patients, 21.5 months average follow-up) or remained patent until the patient's death (five patients, 29 months average follow-up). Two of the late failures (six and seven months), occurred in the three patients who had secondary or complicated reconstructions. In the ten patients whose deep veins were used as primary grafts, eight have remained patent (average follow-up, 24.8 months) and two have become occluded (seven and 21 months). There was no operative mortality and minimal morbidity, suggesting that in patients threatened with limb loss and unavailable saphenous veins, the superficial femoral and popliteal veins may be the graft materials of choice. (Arch Surg1981;116:1141-1145)This publication has 6 references indexed in Scilit:
- Clinical experience with expanded polytetrafluoroethylene (Gore-Tex) grafts for femoropopliteal arterial bypassThe American Journal of Surgery, 1980
- The Use of Arm Veins in Femoral-Popliteal Bypass GraftsAnnals of Surgery, 1979
- EVALUATION OF MODIFIED HUMAN UMBILICAL VEIN AS AN ARTERIAL SUBSTITUTE IN FEMOROPOPLITEAL RECONSTRUCTIVE SURGICAL PROCEDURES1978
- AUTOGENOUS VENOUS GRAFTS 10 YEARS LATER1977
- Use of the superficial femoral vein for femoropopliteal bypassThe American Journal of Surgery, 1970
- Significance of Outflow Obstruction After Femoropopliteal EndarterectomyArchives of Surgery, 1967