Splanchnic Arteriosclerotic Disease and Intestinal Angina
- 1 April 1980
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Medical Association (AMA) in Archives of Surgery
- Vol. 115 (4) , 497-501
- https://doi.org/10.1001/archsurg.1980.01380040119021
Abstract
• Twenty-three patients (13 women and ten men, 33 to 73 years old) underwent reconstruction of 33 major splanchnic arteries for relief of symptomatic intestinal ischemia. All patients experienced postprandial abdominal pain and lost weight (average, 12.8 kg). Arterial reconstructions (32 bypass procedures and one endarterectomy with patch-graft arterioplasty) were undertaken with both autogenous saphenous vein (24) and prosthetic conduits (nine). Revascularizations involved the superior mesenteric (21), celiac (five), hepatic (four), splenic (two), and inferior mesenteric (one) arteries. There were four postoperative deaths; three occurred after emergent secondary attempts at intestinal revascularization. All of the 19 patients who survived benefited from operative intervention. (Arch Surg 115:497-501, 1980)Keywords
This publication has 12 references indexed in Scilit:
- Surgical treatment of chronic visceral ischemiaThe American Journal of Surgery, 1979
- Stenosis and thrombosis of the celiac and mesenteric arteriesThe American Journal of Surgery, 1967
- Recognition and Surgical Management of Visceral Ischemic SyndromesAnnals of Surgery, 1966
- Malabsorption and Mesenteric Ischemia: Report of a CaseCleveland Clinic Journal of Medicine, 1965
- Atherosclerosis in the mesenteric circulation. Observations and correlations with aortic and coronary atherosclerosisAmerican Heart Journal, 1963
- Intestinal AnginaSurgical Clinics of North America, 1962
- Comparative Study of Arteriosclerosis in the Inferior and Superior Mesenteric ArteriesAnnals of Surgery, 1962
- The Pattern of Arteriosclerotic Narrowing of the Celiac and Superior Mesenteric ArteriesAnnals of Surgery, 1959
- Acute and Chronic Thrombosis of the Mesenteric Arteries Associated with MalabsorptionNew England Journal of Medicine, 1958
- ABDOMINAL PAIN OF VASCULAR ORIGINThe Lancet Healthy Longevity, 1936