Abstract

Overt calcification of the recipient artery and outflow bed has been regarded as a poor prognostic factor for femoral-distal arterial bypass patency and subsequent wound healing. In order to determine the short- and long-term limb salvage and graft patency rates achieved in these patients, the records of 35 patients undergoing 38 attempted femoral-tibial bypasses to a calcified recipient artery were reviewed. Two patients were unreconstructable at the time of surgery. Thirty-one of the 36 operations (86 percent) were performed using in situ saphenous vein bypass techniques, 3 were performed with polytetrafluoroethylene (PTFE), 1 with a composite sequential, and 1 with a composite vein graft. Immediate limb salvage was achieved in 31 of 36 limbs (86 percent). Five early belowknee amputations (14 percent) were required, two due to graft thromboses and three due to progressive foot necrosis despite patent grafts. One patient (3 percent) died secondary to sepsis. Three-year primary graft patency and limb salvage rates did not differ significantly from bypasses to noncalcified vessels. Femoral-distal bypass in the presence of overt calcific arterial disease may be successfully accomplished and offers an excellent prognosis for long-term graft patency and limb salvage.

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