| Literature DB >> 22816523 |
Thomas Bessede1, Stephane Droupy, Yacine Hammoudi, Dina Bedretdinova, Antoine Durrbach, Bernard Charpentier, Gerard Benoit.
Abstract
The main surgical changes in kidney procurement, preparation, and transplantation procedures occurred 20 years ago and were undertaken despite the inability to design randomized studies. The objective was to assess the evolution of vascular complications after kidney transplantation in a setting of surgical preventive measures in a historical series. A monocentric series of 3129 consecutive kidney transplantations performed over 3 decades was reviewed. The occurrence of arterial or venous thromboses, stenoses, and aneurysms was analyzed in relation with kidney procurement, preparation, and transplantation techniques. Vascular complications occurred in 13.5% of the recipients with a mean 3-year decrease in kidney graft function. The transplantation of a right kidney without renal vein extension, multiple renal arteries, ex vivo vascular repairs, and end-to-end arterial anastomoses were the unfavorable surgical vascular factors. It was possible to manage Transplant Renal Artery Stenosis (TRAS) nonsurgically in 80% of the cases. The prevention of vascular complications begins from the time of organ procurement by skilled surgeons. The aims of organ preparation are to evaluate the vascular risk, select the organs, and to simplify the anatomical constraints of vascular implantations. The three surgical steps of kidney transplantation are determinant in postoperative vascular complications and the duration of graft function.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2012 PMID: 22816523 DOI: 10.1111/j.1432-2277.2012.01533.x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Transpl Int ISSN: 0934-0874 Impact factor: 3.782