Abstract

To investigate the impact of angioscopy on infrainguinal graft patency, 50 consecutive cases with angioscopy as an adjuvant to infrainguinal arterial bypass performed during a 12-month period were reviewed (group I). For comparison, 42 similar cases of infrainguinal arterial reconstruction performed during the 12 months prior to introduction of routine intraoperative angioscopy were also reviewed (group II). Patients were followed up for 12 months and graft patency was determined at 1, 3, 6, and 12 months. An abnormality was identified in 13 (26%) group I patients (10, angioscopy alone; 1, arteriography alone; 2, both). Defects were anastomotic abnormalities (n = 7), vein sclerosis (n = 3), retained valve cusp (n = 2), and proximal artery stenosis (n = 1). A similar percentage, but different types of defects, were seen in group II; 11 patients (26%) had an abnormality (anastomotic abnormality [n = 3], vein sclerosis [n = 4], retained valve cusp [n = 1], and arterial outflow stenoses [n = 3]). All significant defects were surgically explored and corrected. Graft patency rates in group I and II at 1, 3, 6, and 12 months were 100% and 85% (P < 0.005), 94% and 80% (P < 0.05), 87% and 74% (P = non-significant [NS]), and 86.1% and 73.7% (P = NS), respectively. Intraoperative angioscopy detects anastomotic and vein graft defects not always seen on arteriography; the repair of these defects significantly improves early infrainguinal bypass graft patency rates.

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