Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
2989312 | Journal of Vascular Surgery | 2013 | 11 Pages |
Abstract
There has been a marked shift in treatment modality for advanced femoro-popliteal disease with a lowering of the symptomatic threshold for intervention over 2 decades, likely spurred by the ease of endoluminal interventions. Although peri-procedural and anatomic outcomes for both procedures are equivalent, it appears that open surgery carries a superior long-term clinical efficacy. This superiority is negatively influenced by poor preoperative ambulation status, high modified Cardiac Risk Score, worse presenting symptoms, the occurrence of major adverse cardiovascular events, poor tibial runoff, the absence of hemodynamic success, and occlusion of the original bypass.
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Authors
Christopher J. MD, Javier E. MD, Yoav MD, Charudatta S. MD, Mitul S. MD, Hosam F. MD, Alan B. MD, Mark G. MD, PhD, MBA,