Title of article
Percutaneous femoral puncture for endovascular treatment of occlusive arterial lesions
Author/Authors
Frank J. Criado، نويسنده , , Mordechai Twena، نويسنده , , Maria Halsted، نويسنده , , Omran Abul-Khoudoud، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 1998
Pages
3
From page
119
To page
121
Abstract
Background: Percutaneous femoral arterial access is a most important and difficult aspect of endovascular intervention, and the source of most complications.
Methods: A retrospective review was made of the authors’ 9-year experience with 755 femoral punctures for the endovascular treatment of occlusive disease. The main focus was the evolving success rate with percutaneous arterial entry and the incidence of access-related complications.
Results: Cutdowns were frequent during the first 2 years, 54% and 17%, respectively, decreasing to 5% or lower by the third year. The incidence of femoral hematoma and other complications mirrored the same learning curve. After cutdown, wound infections and lymph leakage occurred in 2.4% each, and prolonged significant pain in 5%.
Conclusions: Percutaneous puncture is a crucial skill in endovascular intervention. Practicing vascular surgeons can expect a significant learning curve. Performance can be optimized through intensive basic and advanced training and preceptorship. The cutdown approach is neither necessary nor acceptable for most endovascular procedures.
Journal title
The American Journal of Surgery
Serial Year
1998
Journal title
The American Journal of Surgery
Record number
620355
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