Directional atherectomy alone or with supplemental percutaneous transluminal angioplasty was used to treat peripheral vascular lesions in 77 patients (85 procedures). Lesions involved 17 iliac arteries, 45 infrainguinal arteries, and 23 laser extremity vein bypass grafts. Technical success, defined as reduction of stenosis diameter to 30% or less of the normal vessel diameter, was achieved in 78 of 85 (92%) cases. The complication rate was 21% (18 of 85 procedures). Most complications were minor and were related to puncture sites. Patients underwent noninvasive follow-up studies, including measurement of ankle-brachial index and segmental pressures, plethysmography, and clinical examination. The mean follow-up period was 13.5 months. The probability of 1-, 2-, and 3-year patency for lesions treated with atherectomy alone was 92%, 84%, and 84%, respectively. Kaplan-Meier survival analysis revealed no difference in 2- to 3-year patency rate on the basis of lesion location or presence of calcification, eccentricity, or ulceration. Diabetic patients, however, had a higher restenosis rate than did patients who were not diabetic (P less than .03).
Primary lesions affecting the sciatic nerve are uncommon, especially in children. Isolated sciatic nerve involvement was found in ten patients during an 8 1/2-year period at a metropolitan children's hospital. Etiologic mechanisms included three with compression and one each with stretch injury after operation using the lithotomy position, stretch injury after closed reduction of hip dislocation, puncture wound, lymphoma, hypersensitivity vasculitis associated with hypereosinophilia, indeterminate lesion associated with transverse myelitis, and idiopathic progressive lesion with negative findings on exploration. Neonatal injuries associated with breech delivery or intragluteal injections were not causative factors in this series. Children with sciatic neuropathies have a variable prognosis depending on the etiology. Compression was the only potentially preventable pathophysiologic mechanism.
In this prospective blinded study of inferior vena caval (IVC) patency, 18 patients underwent 25 duplex ultrasound (US) and magnetic resonance (MR) angiography examinations over an eight-month period following Simon nitinol filter placement. Clinical examination for lower extremity venous stasis and plain abdominal radiography were also performed. Twenty-three of 24 MR examinations and 11 of 24 US examinations were judged technically adequate by the blinded observers. One technically adequate US exam was false positive for intraluminal caval thrombus. Thirteen technically inadequate US examinations missed 3 complete caval occlusions and 2 partial occlusions. MR identified all patients with complete or partial caval occlusion. The authors conclude that duplex US reliably confirms IVC patency only when strict criteria for technical adequacy and interpretation are met (good visualization of filter and IVC above and below filter). MR, although expensive, more reliably identifies nonoccluding intraluminal thrombus and caval occlusion. It should be the noninvasive study of choice in symptomatic patients with venous stasis and patients with recurrent pulmonary emboli.
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