2016
DOI: 10.1177/1708538115619266
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Combined retrograde–antegrade arterial wiring: Peroneal artery can be a bridge to cross infrapopliteal Trans Atlantic Inter Society Consensus D lesions

Abstract: Although demanding, the technique can be reserved for selected cases with failed antegrade recanalization. This technique is valuable when a proximal occlusion is not crossable, when a dissection flap or a perforation in the proximal portion of a target vessel hinders guide-wire advancement. This technique may represent a feasible endovascular option to avoid second distal puncture exhausting the landing zone of a future distal bypass.

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Cited by 2 publications
(2 citation statements)
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“…The peroneal artery is often preserved in occlusive diseases of BTK arteries, even if ATA and PTA are occluded, and there are collateral connections with these occluded arteries distally. 22 Therefore, it is necessary to be careful when intervening ATA and/or PTA origin occlusions order not to disrupt the already impaired blood supply of the foot. The REGART, a newly described technique in this study, allows catheterization of the occluded artery without balloon angioplasty.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The peroneal artery is often preserved in occlusive diseases of BTK arteries, even if ATA and PTA are occluded, and there are collateral connections with these occluded arteries distally. 22 Therefore, it is necessary to be careful when intervening ATA and/or PTA origin occlusions order not to disrupt the already impaired blood supply of the foot. The REGART, a newly described technique in this study, allows catheterization of the occluded artery without balloon angioplasty.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…[17]) with the authors reporting two cases with good technical success but without subsequent limb salvage. Since then, only two main clinical papers focusing on this approach have been published [18,19], with varying success rates. In a recent systematic review [13] that included a large number of distal retrograde tibial punctures, peroneal artery (PA) access has been found to be used in only 3.8% of the all cases with the vast majority of infra-popliteal retrograde access sites obtained at the level of the dorsalis pedis artery or the distal posterior tibial artery.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%