Affiliation:
1. Departments of Surgery and Vascular Surgery, University of Texas Medical Branch, Galveston, Texas
Abstract
Catheter-directed thrombolysis was used either alone or as an adjunct to percutaneous transluminal angioplasty (PTA) or surgery for peripheral vascular occlusion on 112 occasions in 102 patients. Symptom duration ranged from < one to > twenty-eight days. Thrombolytic therapy using urokinase plasminogen activator thrombolysis (uPAT), including intrathrombic injection when possible, was successful (> 50% lysis) in 99 procedures (88%). Technical failure (<50% lysis) occurred in 13 procedures (12%). In 9 of the 13 failures, intrathrombic injection of urokinase was not possible, but the duration of occlusion was > twenty-eight days in all but 1. Two other failures were from embolic sources and 2 more occurred in patients with a hypercoagulable state. The uPAT was adjunctive to PTA/surgery in 56 cases (50%). PTA following uPAT was required and successfully performed in 24 of 27 cases (88.9%). Surgery followed lytic therapy in another 32 (including the 3 failed PTAs). In the remaining 56 cases (50%), no additional intervention was required. There were 20 complications (18%), minor in 16 of 20 (80%). Minor complications included small puncture site hematomas and distal embolization resolved by continued lytic therapy Four major complications occurred. One was retroperitoneal hemorrhage directly contributing to the only death in the series. The other 3 were hematuria (2) and femoral neuropathy (1). The authors conclude that catheter-directed lytic therapy alone or as an adjunct to PTA/surgery is a valuable approach to peripheral vascular thromboembolic disease. It is less likely to succeed in chronic occlusion. The incidence of complications is moderate but acceptable.
Subject
Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine
Cited by
13 articles.
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