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The Journal of Thoracic and Cardiovascular Surgery, Vol 104, 385-390, Copyright © 1992 by The American Association for Thoracic Surgery and The Western Thoracic Surgical Association
L Jacob, O Rabary, S Boudaoud, D Payen, E Sarfati, D Gossot, E Rolland, B Eurin and M Celerier
Regional ischemia may induce cervical anastomosis leakage or stenosis or
graft necrosis after esophageal reconstruction by retrosternal
interposition of an ileocolic graft. These complications may be related to
systemic or local hemodynamic alterations. This study was designed to
evaluate the relationship between immediate postoperative arterial blood
supply to the graft, arterial patency monitored by angiography, and
clinical outcome. Eight patients (mean age 30 +/- 4 years; standard
deviation) were studied. Miniaturized Doppler implantable microprobes were
sutured to the single artery supplying the graft and connected to an 8 MHz
pulsed Doppler flowmeter. Systemic hemodynamic parameters and mesenteric
hemodynamic data were collected 3 hours after the end of the surgical
procedure. These data were compared with the angiogram of the right
superior colic artery supplying the graft, systematically performed on the
fifteenth postoperative day, and with the clinical course of follow-up for
3 months. Five patients (group 1) had excellent clinical and angiographic
results. Mean mesenteric blood flow in these patients was 51 +/- 49
ml.min-1 (+/- standard deviation, ranging from 9 to 122). Three patients
(group 2) had a poor clinical outcome. One had early complete graft
necrosis and the two others had leakage of the cervical anastomosis with
poor distal arterial vascularization of the graft on the angiogram. Mean
mesenteric blood flow was nul in the first patient and, respectively, 24
and 28 ml.min-1 in the two others. Cardiac output and mean arterial
pressure were in the same range for all patients. Phasic velocity shape
analysis revealed that the three group 2 patients had an end-systolic or
end-diastolic reverse flow pattern that was not observed in the five group
1 patients, which suggested a submaximal increase in downstream vascular
resistance. This reverse flow pattern seems to be a good predictor of
ischemia-related complications. We conclude that perioperative pulsed
Doppler blood flow monitoring in an ileocolic graft may be useful for the
diagnosis and prevention of ischemic complications.
ARTICLES
Usefulness of perioperative pulsed Doppler flowmetry in predicting postoperative local ischemic complications after ileocolic esophagoplasty
Department of Anesthesiology, Hopital Universitaire Saint-Louis, Paris, France.
This article has been cited by other articles:
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L. Jacob, S. Boudaoud, O. Rabary, D. Payen, E. Sarfati, D. Gossot, E. Rolland, B. Eurin, and M. Celerier Decreased mesenteric blood flow supplying retrosternal esophageal ileocoloplastic grafts during positive-pressure breathing J. Thorac. Cardiovasc. Surg., January 1, 1994; 107(1): 68 - 73. [Abstract] [Full Text] |
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