Carotid brachial bypass for treating proximal upper-extremity arterial occlusive disease.

Authors
Category Primary study
JournalAmerican journal of surgery
Year 1994
Symptomatic occlusive disease of the subclavian arteries, not associated with thoracic outlet syndrome, is an uncommon problem with a paucity of literature related to the appropriateness of bypass graft selection and long-term patency for revascularization. Between 1985 and 1993, 9 patients (3 men and 6 women) underwent 13 carotid brachial bypasses for chronic severe upper-extremity ischemia. Ages ranged from 47 to 75 years (mean 65). Three patients had documented collagen vascular disease, 1 had radiation arteritis, and 4 had bilateral disease requiring staged arterial reconstruction. Indications for operation included severe exercise-induced ischemia in two limbs (15%), rest pain in eight (62%), and gangrene or infection, or both, in three (23%). Two bypasses were performed for failed prior reconstructions. Inflow originated from the carotid artery (4 proximal and 9 bifurcation), and distal anastomoses were made to a disease-free section of brachial artery. Reinforced 6 mm thin-wall polytetrafluoroethylene (PTFE) grafts were used in all operations. No operative mortality or major upper-extremity amputation was associated with the procedure, although digital amputations were performed in four instances. Follow-up ranged from 4 to 83 months with a mean of 38 months. The 5-year primary patency rate, by life-table analysis, was 92%. Our results showed excellent long-term patency when prosthetic grafts were used for carotid brachial bypass, because of excellent runoff and the relatively short graft length required.
Epistemonikos ID: da850f824e524f7250794390c46fabd1f5d7a3db
First added on: Oct 09, 2025