Abstract

The use of saphenous vein patching following carotid endarterectomy is reported to produce aneurysmal dilatation with the risk of thrombosis and possible rupture. The authors have studied patients who have had saphenous vein patch angioplasty following carotid endarterectomy to assess whether there is any progressive arterial dilatation. Thirty-five patients who had undergone saphenous vein patch carotid endarterectomy were age- and sex-matched with 31 subjects that had direct closure endarterectomy. All participants underwent carotid duplex scanning. The external diameters of the mid common carotid artery, the bulb and the proximal internal carotid artery were measured bilaterally. The diameters of the endarterectomized carotid were compared with the contralateral side using a paired t-test. Using an unpaired t-test, the saphenous vein angioplasty group was compared with the directly closed group. A graph was plotted of the ratio of internal carotid artery diameter of the saphenous vein angioplasty group (endarterectomized artery to the contralateral artery) against the length of follow-up, and the Pearson correlation coefficient was calculated. When the saphenous vein angioplasty group was compared with the directly closed group there was a significant difference between the carotid bulb (11.6 versus 9.7 mm, P<0.001) and internal carotid artery diameters (9.0 versus 7.0 mm, P<0.001). Longitudinal analysis of the saphenous vein angioplasty group showed that the increased diameter of the endarterectomized internal carotid artery progressed with time after surgery ( r=0.51, P<0.005, and r=0.56, P<0.001). Vein patching increases the diameter of the internal carotid artery, and this may further increase with time possibly predisposing to aneurysm formation. Further longitudinal studies of paired data are required.

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