This interim report represents the largest analysis of US military vascular injuries in more than 30 years. Wounding patterns reflect past experience with a high percentage of extremity injuries. Management of arterial repair with autologous vein graft remains the treatment of choice. Repairs in contaminated wound beds should be avoided. An increase in injuries from improvised explosive devices in modern conflict warrants the more liberal application of contrast arteriography. Endovascular techniques have advanced the contemporary management and proved valuable in the treatment of select wartime vascular injuries.
Endovascular interventions (EVIs) are an important adjunct to open surgical management of peripheral vascular injuries. In appropriate situations, EVIs decrease operative time, estimated blood loss, and iatrogenic complications when compared with similar surgical cohorts by limiting surgical dissection in traumatized operative fields. In situations where definitive repair is not possible with EVIs, endovascular techniques permit control of hemorrhage or damage and facilitate open surgical repair. EVIs for peripheral vascular injury have proven effective in three anatomic regions: the neck, subclavian, and lower-extremity regions. The interventional radiologist should become familiar with the physical and personnel resources in the area preferred by the consulting trauma team to minimize unnecessary delays when acute intervention or angiography is requested. Clinical and radiographic surveillance for patency and compliance with antiplatelet or anticoagulation therapy is essential but has historically been poor in trauma patients.
Reproducible and comparable measures of diameter and length can be obtained by each of three imaging modalities available for endograft sizing. As a single imaging modality, 3D CT appears to have the best correlation for both diameters and lengths; however, the difference is not sufficient enough to alter endograft selection. Three-dimensional CT may be reserved for challenging aortic anatomy where small differences in measurements would affect patient or graft selection for EVAR.
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