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| Volume 70 Number 6 November 2003 |
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| Endovascular Repair of Diffuse Atherosclerotic Occlusive Disease Using Stented Grafts | 410-417 |
1Instructor of Surgery and Interventional Cardiovascular Medicine, Division of Vascular and Endovascular Surgery, Brigham and Women’s Hospital, Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA and 2Chief and Professor of Surgery, Division of Vascular Surgery, Department of Surgery, Mount Sinai School of Medicine, New York, NY.
Address all correspondence to Edwin C. Gravereaux, M.D., Brigham and Women’s Hospital, Division of Vascular Surgery, 75 Francis Street, Boston, MA 02115.
ABSTRACT
Minimally invasive techniques have greatly influenced the practice of surgery in the past two decades, especially the vascular surgical specialty. Current technological advances and refinements have allowed for the application of less invasive or percutaneous endovascular techniques to the treatment of arterial aneurysms and peripheral vascular occlusive disease. While balloon angioplasty and stenting for occlusive disease have proven successful in certain vascular beds (such as common iliac arteries), infrainguinal results are generally less impressive.
This paper reviews the results of the application of covered stent-grafts to peripheral arterial occlusive disease, both at the aortoiliac and infrainguinal anatomical levels. The review includes the results of iliac artery stented graft placement utilizing a combined open surgical and endovascular technique at Mount Sinai Medical Center.
KEY WORDS
Endovascular, stent-graft, iliac artery, superficial femoral artery, minimally invasive, peripheral vascular disease.| |
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