The revision of duplex scan-detected vein graft stenosis with surgical or endovascular techniques was associated with an excellent patency rate, including when intervention on alternative vein conduits or treatment of restenosis was necessary. When PTA was selected on the basis of clinical and duplex scan selection criteria, the endovascular treatment of focal vein graft stenosis was effective, durable, and comparable with the surgical revision of more extensive lesions.
The observed 15% intraoperative revision rate coupled with a low 90-day failure/revision rate (2.5%) for bypasses with normal papaverine-augmented duplex scans supports the routine use of this diagnostic modality to enhance the precision and early results of infrainguinal vein bypass procedures.
The yield of duplex scan surveillance after CEA was low. Only 13 patients (5.9%) had severe disease develop to warrant additional intervention. Progression of contralateral disease rather than restenosis was the most common abnormality that was identified. Duplex scanning at 1-year to 2-year intervals after CEA is adequate when a technically precise repair is achieved and minimal contralateral disease (<50% DR) is present. A policy of duplex scan surveillance and reoperation for high-grade stenosis was associated with a 1.6% incidence rate of disabling stroke during the follow-up period.
Apparent ethmoid inflammation which resolved with alternation of the nasal cycle or following application of topical vasoconstrictors has been observed with magnetic resonance imaging. A similar phenomenon might occur to a lesser degree with computed tomography (CT), leading to overdiagnosis of limited sinus disease. The degree to which ostiomeatal complex disease is reversible by topical vasoconstrictors was investigated. Ten patients with histories of chronic or recurrent sinusitis underwent coronal CT studies of the paranasal sinuses before and after the application of a topical vasoconstrictor. Mucosal volume or thickness measurements were obtained from the turbinates, infundibulum, ethmoidal cells, and antrum. Vasoconstrictor application markedly reduced turbinate size and appeared to reduce mucosal thickening in the ethmoidal infundibulum. Minimal mucosal changes identified in the paranasal sinuses by computed tomography were not reversed by vasoconstrictors and therefore are likely to be pathologic.
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