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  • Title: [Digestive arterial bypass. Long-term clinical results].
    Author: Courbier R, Ferdani M, Jausseran JM, Bergeron P, Aboukhater R, Chbib A.
    Journal: J Chir (Paris); 1990 Mar; 127(3):129-35. PubMed ID: 2355054.
    Abstract:
    In the period between September 1966 and December 1988, 69 patients were operated, including 92 cases of restorative surgery on celiac, hepatic or superior mesenteric arteries. This is a presentation, of the detailed retrospective analysis of 12 years' experience with more homogeneously matched indications and technics. Only indirect, venous or prosthetic bypasses and reimplants are discussed; excluded are all other digestive revascularization procedures, as well as acute ischemic surgery cases. 31 patients (28 men, 3 women) of mean age 59.8 years (47-80) have undergone consecutive surgery: 11 presented with symptoms of predominantly digestive origin; 18 had a combined aortoiliac bypass operation; radiological signs of disease occurred in 46 cases. (celiac artery): 22 including 14 stenoses, 5 thrombotic cases and 3 aneurysms; superior mesenteric artery: 21 including 13 stenoses and 8 thrombotic cases; inferior mesenteric: 3 thrombotic cases). A restorative operation was carried out on 45 patients, 6 of whom had had previous surgery. 21 patients had a single artery restored: celiac (3), hepatic (9), superior mesenteric (9). Double artery surgery was performed in 12 cases. The procedures most commonly used on the hepatic and superior mesenteric arteries were indirect reimplantation and bypass surgery, respectively. Evolution showed increased numbers of anterograde constructions. No deaths were recorded in the perioperative period. Two patients had early recurrences of thrombosis at D10, which required new bypassing. During the mean retrospective period of 6.1 years, we recorded 6 cases of blindness, 8 secondary deaths, 1 single case of mesenteric infarction 18 months after a repeated restorative operation on the superior mesenteric artery; 17 patients remained symptom-free.
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