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Evaluation of Ipsilateral Antegrade Techniques for Endovascular Treatment of Ostial Superficial Femoral Artery Lesions

Article

Last updated: 22 Jan 2023

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Abstract

Background: The most prevalent cause of intermittent claudication is peripheral arterial disease (PAD) of the superficial femoral artery (SFA).The SFA is a target of atherosclerotic disease predominantly in the distal section in the region of Hunter's canal where the adductor muscles tend to compress the artery and in the proximal section near the bifurcation to the deep femoral artery.
Objective: In patients with persistent lower limb ischemia, to determine the feasibility, adequacy, safety, and consequences of an ipsilateral antegrade approach in the event of superficial femoral artery ostial lesions.
Patients and methods: Between August 2019 and August 2021, 30 patients with peripheral arterial occlusive disease were included in this prospective cohort research at Al-Azhar University Hospitals (Al-Hussain and Bab-Alsheryah) (affecting ostium of the superficial femoral artery).
Results: The most frequent extension of the lesion was SFA CTO total length till the adductor canal (36.7%), followed by proximal 1/3 SFA tight stenosis extending into middle 1/3 of SFA (26.7%), proximal SFA CTO extending into middle 1/3 of SFA (20%), and proximal 1/3 SFA tight stenosis (16.7%). Most patients showed technical success (80%), and most of them (79.2%) had endo-luminal wire passage. The most frequent type of passage in failure cases was contralateral antegrade (50%), followed by trans brachial antegrade (33.3%) and popliteal ipsilateral retrograde (16.7%).
Conclusion: Endovascular therapy (EVT) in ostial and near ostial SFA occlusive lesions with ipsilateral antegrade access through common femoral artery puncture is a feasible and effective approach.

DOI

10.21608/aimj.2022.126768.1874

Keywords

Ipsilateral Antegrade Techniques, Ostial Superficial, Femoral Artery Lesions

Authors

First Name

Khalid

Last Name

AlBealy

MiddleName

Helmi

Affiliation

Vascular Surgery Department, Faculty of Medicine, Al-Azhar University, Egypt

Email

tabeebgarrah_khalid@yahoo.com

City

Cairo

Orcid

-

First Name

Ashraf

Last Name

Eweda

MiddleName

Mohammed

Affiliation

Vascular Surgery Department, Faculty of Medicine, Al-Azhar University, Egypt

Email

ashraf_ewida@hotmail.com

City

Cairo

Orcid

-

First Name

Abdelaziz

Last Name

Abdelhafez

MiddleName

Ahmed

Affiliation

Vascular surgery faculty of medicine Al-Azhar University

Email

aziz4002@hotmail.com

City

Cairo

Orcid

-

Volume

3

Article Issue

9

Related Issue

36971

Issue Date

2022-09-01

Receive Date

2022-03-11

Publish Date

2022-09-01

Page Start

165

Page End

171

Print ISSN

2682-3381

Online ISSN

2682-339X

Link

https://aimj.journals.ekb.eg/article_261512.html

Detail API

https://aimj.journals.ekb.eg/service?article_code=261512

Order

28

Type

Original Article

Type Code

710

Publication Type

Journal

Publication Title

Al-Azhar International Medical Journal

Publication Link

https://aimj.journals.ekb.eg/

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Article

Created At

22 Jan 2023