Abstract

To analyze the immediate and midterm success of low-profile stent placement in calcified ulcerated lesions of the infrarenal aorta in patients with arterial occlusive disease. In this prospective case series, 13 symptomatic patients (eight men, five women; mean age, 64.8 years +/- 12.1; age range, 44-84 years) with focal calcified ulcerated stenoses of the infrarenal aorta were treated with stent placement by using a low-profile technique in a radiology intervention center during a 4-year period. Clinical examinations and duplex ultrasonography were used to evaluate the stents? patency and clinical success. Kaplan-Meier graphs were calculated to analyze the freedom-of-symptom rate. The initial technical success rate was 92% (12 of 13 patients). Due to extended calcifications, a residual stenosis of 50%-60% remained in one patient. No peri-interventional complications occurred. The mean follow-up was 26 months (range, 5-53 months). During follow-up, one patient had a restenosis after 7 months and presented clinically with Fontaine stage IIb. Two patients had iliac and/or femoral stenoses, and both presented with Fontaine stage IIb. One patient's symptoms originated from the lumbar spine. Primary patency and primary clinical success rates were 85% and 69%, respectively. According to Kaplan-Meier tables, the freedom-from-symptom rates were 92%, 84%, 73%, and 63% at 0, 7, 12, and 21 months, respectively. Low-profile stent placement in calcified, ulcerated lesions of the infrarenal aorta is an effective and safe treatment for symptomatic stenoses in patients with arterial occlusive disease after a mean follow-up of 26 months.

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