Unexpected intraoperative need for vascular surgical expertise occurs often enough that vascular surgeons should be regarded as an essential operating room resource to the general operating room, nonvascular surgeons, and their patients. Intraoperative vascular surgical consultation in support of other surgeons requires a high level of open technical operative skills and is time and labor intensive.
This study shows that academic vascular surgery is a popular career option for current vascular surgery trainees, especially those in 0+5 programs. Choosing a career in academic vascular surgery appears not to be influenced by sex, ethnicity, child care concerns, salary expectations, or debt burden, even though most trainees carry enormous debt. The data imply future academic vascular surgeons will likely have greater gender and ethnic variability than is currently seen.
To compare patient outcomes of primary open operation for aortoiliac occlusive disease (AIOD) with those of secondary open operations for failed endovascular therapy (ET) of AIOD. Design: A retrospective cohort study was performed analyzing demographic characteristics, comorbidities, and outcomes.
Outcomes are similar for patients with CIA or EIA stents and for those with combined ipsilateral CIA and EIA stents. Late open conversions for iliac artery stent failure are uncommon and not influenced by the location or extent of prior iliac artery stent placement. Endovascular therapy for aortoiliac disease should be extended to consider selected patients with ipsilateral CIA and EIA stenoses/occlusions.
months. Limbs classified as TASC A or B had significantly better patency rates than those classified as TASC C or D (P Ͻ .001). While the number of runoff vessels decreased with worsening of the TASC classification (P ϭ .024), overall (P ϭ .355), and within individual TASC classes (P Ͼ .126 for each), there was no difference in the primary patency of stented segments with two or three patent tibial arteries and those with one or no vessels continuous to the ankle. Limbs with poor runoff (one or no vessels) were no more likely to fail with occlusion than their counterparts with two or three patent tibial vessels (P ϭ .383). The number of patent tibial vessels at the time of initial stenting did not impact ultimate limb salvage (P ϭ .32).Conclusions: The number of patent tibial vessels does not influence the primary patency of primarily stented femoral and popliteal arteries. TASC II classification would seem to be significantly more predictive of initial failure after angioplasty and stenting of these vessels.
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