Factors determining outcome of reversed saphenous vein femoropopliteal bypass grafts

Author:

Sonnenfeld Tomas1,Cronestrand Ruben1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Surgery, Karolinska Institute, Huddinge Hospital, S-141 86 Huddinge, Sweden

Abstract

Summary This investigation was designed to study factors that might be of predictive value in femoropopliteal vein bypass grafting. A series of 146 grafts had a cumulative 5-year graft patency of 82·5 per cent. Five-year limb survival rate in salvage cases was 77·9 per cent. These results are encouraging. However, taking certain factors into account, the patency rates varied. In limbs with claudication, the 5-year graft patency rate was significantly higher than in salvage procedures (P < 0·05). Basal and maximal (during pharmacological vasodilalation) intraoperative graft flow rates were also significantly higher in claudicating limbs (P < 0·01). Reconstructions in limbs with a good run-off had better patency and flow rates than in limbs with a poor run-off (P < 0·001). This suggests that progression of distal atherosclerosis is a major factor for late graft thrombosis. The incidence of graft thrombosis was correlated with the flow rates (P < 0·01). Age, the presence of diabetes, graft diameter and the site of the distal anastomosis did not affect patency.

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Surgery

Reference33 articles.

1. Le traitement de l'arténte oblitérante par la greffe veineuse;Kunlin;Arch. Mal. Coeur,1949

2. The arterial homograft used as ‘bypass’ in patients with femoro-popliteal arteriosclerotic obstruction;Hall;Acta Chir. Scand.,1964

3. The great saphenous vein used in situ as an arterial shunt after vein valve extirpation;Cappelen;Acta Chir. Scand.,1964

4. The value of blood flow measurements in acute arterial surgery;Cronestrand;Scand. J. Thorac. Cardiovasc. Surg.,1969

5. Electromagnetic blood flowmetry in clinical surgery;Cappelen,1967

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