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69751

Assessment of the Endovascular Management of Flush Superficial Femoral Artery (SFA) Total Occlusion

Article

Last updated: 22 Jan 2023

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Abstract

Background: Involvement of the superficial femoral artery (SFA) in occlusive peripheral arterial disease (PAD) is extremely common representing 80% of the symptomatic patients undergoing angiography.
Objectives: This study aimed to assess the endovascular management of flush SFA total occlusion in patients with PAD and with critical chronic lower limb ischemia due to flush occlusion of the SFA in the Vascular Surgery Department in Al-Azhar University Hospitals.
Patients and Methods: Patients with chronic PAD and aged 40–65 years, with SFA flush total occlusion including heavily calcified, long, and fibrotic lesions, and the occlusions up to 15 cm long in the SFA were included in the current study. Patients were subjected either to contralateral approach, ipsilateral antegrade approach, ipsilateral horizontal puncture, or retrograde access to the SFA via popliteal or dorsalis pedis.
Results: An overall 20 patients were enrolled in the current study with a mean age of 59.5± 6.77 years. There were 55% females and 45% males. The risk factors distribution among the studied group were diabetes mellitus (100%), hypertension (65%), smoking (65%), chronic hepatic disease (65%), dyslipidemia (55%), and only 5% had chronic vascular disease. Patients were clinically presented by toe gangrene (35%), followed by foot gangrene (25%), as the main presentation.
Conclusion: Endovascular management strategies of flush SFA total occlusion in patients with PAD due to SFA total occlusion can be safely used with acceptable technical success, short term patency rates, and limb salvage.

DOI

10.21608/amj.2020.69751

Keywords

Angioplasty-Stents, endovascular

Authors

First Name

Mohamed

Last Name

Abd El-Hamied Abd El-Rhman

MiddleName

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Affiliation

Vascular Surgery Department, Al -Azhar University, Cairo, Egypt

Email

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City

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Orcid

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First Name

Mohamed

Last Name

Yahia Zakaria

MiddleName

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Affiliation

Vascular Surgery Department, Al -Azhar University, Cairo, Egypt

Email

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City

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Orcid

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First Name

Karim

Last Name

Mohamady Eid Mohamady

MiddleName

-

Affiliation

Vascular Surgery Department, Al -Azhar University, Cairo, Egypt

Email

karimalmohamady@gmail.com

City

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Orcid

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Volume

49

Article Issue

2

Related Issue

10133

Issue Date

2020-04-01

Receive Date

2020-02-02

Publish Date

2020-04-01

Page Start

447

Page End

456

Print ISSN

1110-0400

Link

https://amj.journals.ekb.eg/article_69751.html

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https://amj.journals.ekb.eg/service?article_code=69751

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10

Type

Original Article

Type Code

941

Publication Type

Journal

Publication Title

Al-Azhar Medical Journal

Publication Link

https://amj.journals.ekb.eg/

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Details

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Article

Created At

22 Jan 2023