| Literature DB >> 28890785 |
Ahmet Dolapoglu1,2, Serkan Ertugay1, Hakan Posacioglu1.
Abstract
True femoral artery aneurysm is a rare vascular entity and is often associated with aortic or peripheral aneurysms. Life-threatening complications associated with peripheral arterial aneurysms include rupture, thrombosis, and embolization. In patients with multiple aneurysms, any symptomatic aneurysms should be treated first; in asymptomatic patients, the aneurysms can be repaired either simultaneously in a single operation or serially in a staged procedure. We report a case of concomitant true femoral aneurysm and bilateral iliac artery aneurysms, which were treated with a combination of open surgical and endovascular techniques.Entities:
Keywords: Aneurysm; endovascular procedures; femoral artery/pathology/surgery; iliac aneurysm/surgery
Year: 2017 PMID: 28890785 PMCID: PMC5574470 DOI: 10.1177/2050313X17726911
Source DB: PubMed Journal: SAGE Open Med Case Rep ISSN: 2050-313X
Figure 1.Coronal contrast–enhanced computed tomography image of the aneurysms of the right common femoral artery and both common iliac arteries.
Figure 2.Three-dimensional reconstruction of the aneurysms.
Figure 3.Intraoperative photograph showing the aneurysm extending from the common femoral artery to the proximal deep femoral artery and the superficial femoral artery. This was a Type II aneurysm according to the Cutler and Darling classification.
Figure 4.This picture shows graft placement with a knitted Dacron Y graft. A second (10-mm) Dacron graft was anastomosed to the first in an end-to-side configuration to create an access point for planned endovascular repair.