| Literature DB >> 28479435 |
Raphael Meier1, Ian Fournier2, Christian Toso2, Thierry Berney2, Marek Bednarkiewicz2.
Abstract
A 61-year-old man received a living-donor kidney graft for an end-stage renal disease. In the postoperative course, the patient was oliguric and needed dialysis. The postoperative Doppler showed a normal peak systolic velocity and maintained parenchymal perfusion associated with a parvus tardus signal. The patient was operated, and a kinked renal artery was found. To reposition the artery, the distal iliac artery was clamped, sectioned, shortened, and reanastomosed after a 90° axial rotation. This innovative technic allowed restoration of a normal flow in the parenchyma and avoided an additional clamping, cooling, ischemia, and reanastomosis/reperfusion of the graft. Postoperative diuresis immediately raised >100 mL/hr and creatinine durably returned to normal values.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28479435 DOI: 10.1016/j.avsg.2017.03.183
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Ann Vasc Surg ISSN: 0890-5096 Impact factor: 1.466