Pedal bypass surgery on arteriographically invisible foot arteries detected by doppler-ultrasound

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Authors

STAFFA Robert LEYPOLD Jindrich GREGOR Zdenek DVORAK Martin JERABEK Jiri

Year of publication 2006
Type Article in Periodical
Magazine / Source International Angiology
MU Faculty or unit

Faculty of Medicine

Citation
Field Surgery incl. transplantology
Keywords Vascular surgical procedures; Pedal bypass; Peripheral arterial disease; Angiography; Ultrasonography; Duplex
Description Aim. Pedal runoff vessels are not always visible on preoperative arteriograms. In this study the long-term patency of pedal grafts was evaluated in relation to whether, preoperatively, the pedal arteries were visualized by angiography or not and were only detected by Doppler-ultrasound. Methods. In 2000-2005, 81 pedal bypass grafts were performed in patients with chronic critical lower-limb ischemia, of which 54 (66.7 %) had diabetes. Tissue loss was recorded in 68 (84.0 %) limbs and rest pain in 13 (16.0 %) limbs. In 24 limbs (29.6 %) bypass grafts were implanted on the pedal arteries that had not been visualized by preoperative angiography, but had been detected only by Doppler-ultrasound. The patients were followed up according to a standard graft surveillance program including clinical and color Doppler-ultrasound examination at 1 and 2 months postoperatively, and then once every 6 months. Results. During the follow-up (median 17 months; range, 3 to 69 months), 18 grafts (22.2 %) failed. Seven limbs had to be treated by early thrombectomy, which resulted in long-term graft patency and limb salvage. The early post-operative mortality rate was 2.5 %. Cumulative primary and secondary graft patency rates and limb-salvage rates were 70.2 %, 80.2 % and 82.4 %, respectively. No significant difference in the risk of graft occlusion was found between the patients with visible and those with invisible pedal arteries on preoperative arteriograms (Fishers exact test). Conclusion. Pedal bypass grafting is a safe method with good long-term outcomes. Doppler sonography is a reliable modality for detection of pedal arteries invisible on arteriograms and it helps reduce the number of patients with non-operable arterial occlusion disease by about 25 %.
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