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Aortofemoral bypass (AFB) has been recognized as a durable and effective form of vascular reconstruction for aortoiliac occlusive disease. With the advent of balloon angioplasty and intraluminal stents in the last 20 years, there has been a decrease in the number of patients treated by AFB procedures. However, it is still the treatment of choice for selected patients with extensive bilateral and calcific aortoiliac occlusive disease.
The most common complication occurring after the placement of an AFB graft is thrombotic occlusion of one of its limbs. This can occur early after bypass grafting, but it manifests with increasing frequency during long-term follow-up. The incidence of primary thrombosis of an AFB limb is reported to be approximately 10% within the first 5 years and up to 20% after 10 years. Among late failures, the average time from placement of the graft to limb thrombosis was 34 months.
Those with limb thrombosis after an AFB are usually high-risk patients, often arriving at the hospital on an urgent basis with an ischemic lower extremity, multiple comorbidities, and generalized extensive arteriosclerotic occlusive disease. These patients pose multiple management and operative challenges that require careful clinical assessment and judgment.
Causes of aortic graft limb occlusion can be best conceptualized as early or late . Early postoperative thrombosis of an AFB graft limb most commonly results from a technical problem. Such problems most often occur with either the handling of the graft or the construction of the distal anastomosis at the time of AFB graft placement. Generally, inflow from the aorta is not a problem, provided that a major clamp injury or dissection has not occurred. Correct handling of the graft includes its proper placement without twisting through the retroperitoneal tunnel to the femoral position. Proper graft length is critical because redundant graft near either anastomosis tends to kink and obstruct blood flow ( Figures 1 and 2 ). Extended graft body versus limb length can also cause a kink at the origin of the limb as it traverses the pelvis to the inguinal ligament. Proper technical execution of the distal anastomosis requires careful clamping of an often diseased superficial femoral artery (SFA) or profunda femoral artery (PFA) to avoid creating intimal flaps. Adequate intraprocedural anticoagulation and ample flushing of the graft and vessels of air or thrombus that have accumulated in the graft during construction of the anastomoses is also important.
It is also relevant to properly assess the extent of outflow disease, to be assured of adequate outflow to maintain graft limb patency. It is important to recognize the relevance of a significant stenosis of the PFA origin in a patient with an SFA that is severely diseased or occluded. Occasionally, the PFA does not have the blood flow capacity to maintain patency of the AFB limb. A distal bypass might need to be performed in conjunction with the AFB graft in this setting.
Late thrombosis of an AFB limb generally occurs secondary to progressive intimal hyperplasia or progression of outflow atherosclerotic disease at the distal anastomosis. In the first few years after graft placement, luminal narrowing can result from intimal hyperplasia from a clamp injury or turbulent flow from a large-diameter prosthetic graft anastomosed to diminutive artery. Late thrombosis results primarily from progression of distal arteriosclerotic disease. This may also be associated with an anastomotic aneurysm ( Figure 3 ). The anastomotic aneurysm, upon enlarging, develops luminal thrombus, resulting in a thrombogenic milieu that can precipitate graft limb occlusion. Rarely, a proximal aortic stenosis occurs and leads to aortic graft limb thrombosis ( Figure 4 ). This condition is best avoided by placing the proximal graft-to-aorta anastomosis as close as possible to the origins of the renal arteries.
Other causes of aortic graft limb occlusion are unusual. It is rare to have a hypercoagulable state by itself cause occlusion of a single limb of a graft. Other contributing causes such as impaired cardiac function or high doses of vasopressors could lead to bilateral limb occlusion and aortic thrombosis, but this is unusual. However, with vascular disease causing a degree of obstruction to blood flow, these other factors can contribute to graft limb thromboses. In addition, because the femoral artery or distal anastomosis is an important access site to the vascular tree for vascular or cardiac interventions, thrombosis of a limb can follow a local injury, overzealous compression of the access site after sheath removal, or inadequate anticoagulation with the placement of a catheter or a larger device such as an intraaortic balloon pump.
Patients with an AFB limb occlusion usually come to the hospital with acute symptoms of lower extremity ischemia. Less often, with slowly progressive arteriosclerotic disease, enough collaterals develop so that symptoms manifest as progressive intermittent claudication. Characteristically, patients complain of greater symptoms of lower extremity ischemia than existed when they required their original operation.
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