Audible Bleeding
Audible Bleeding Editor and vascular surgery fellow Richa Kalsi () is joined by 4th year general surgery resident Sasank Kalipatnapu (), JVS editor Dr. Audra Duncan (), and JVS-VL editor Dr. Ruth Bush () to discuss two great articles in the JVS family of journals. Today’s episode hosts Dr. Lowenkamp, Dr. Sridharan (), and Dr. Lin. Articles: Part 1: (Dr. Lowenkamp & Dr. Sridharan) Part 2: (Dr. Lin) Show Guests Dr. Mikayla Lowenkamp - PGY4 Integrated Vascular Surgery Resident at the University of Pittsburgh Dr. Natalie Sridharan - Associate Professor of Surgery at the...
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In this episode, we spotlight editorials and abstracts from the Journal of Vascular Surgery Cases, Innovations, and Techniques (). Editorials and Abstracts are read by Authors as well as members of the .You can Guests: Grant Lewin, MD, PGY4 SLU Hosts: John Culhane () Follow us , Learn more about us at and provide us with your feedback with our . *Gore is a financial sponsor of this podcast, which has been independently developed by the presenters and does not constitute medical advice from Gore. Always...
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Audible Bleeding editor Wen () is joined by 5th-year general surgery resident Sasank Kalipatnapu () from UMass Chan Medical School, and JVS editor Dr. Duncan () to discuss some of our favorite articles in the JVS family of journals. This episode hosts Dr. Newton and Dr. Goodney, the authors of the following paper. Articles: Show Guests Dr. Goodney- section Chief of vascular surgery at Dartmouth Hitchcock Medical Center as well as associate Professor at Dartmouth. Chair of the research advisory committee within the SVS quality improvement program. ...
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Jacob Soucy () hosts an inside look at one of the most active and collaborative vascular surgery research teams in the country, the Vascular Surgery Outcomes Research Team (VSORT) at Penn State College of Medicine. VSORT is a dynamic academic group that brings together vascular surgery attendings, residents, postdoctoral fellows, and medical students to conduct impactful outcomes-based research. Meeting every Friday at 4 PM, the team has produced dozens of peer-reviewed manuscripts, podium presentations, and national collaborations, embodying the power of mentorship and structure in...
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Audible Bleeding Editor and vascular surgery fellow Richa Kalsi () is joined by 4th year general surgery resident Joe El Badaoui (), JVS editor Dr. Audra Duncan (), and JVS-VS editor Dr. John Curci () to discuss two great articles in the JVS family of journals. The first article discusses an extensive experience using cryopreserved arterial allografts for vascular reconstruction after major oncologic surgery. The second article sheds light on nanoplastics in atherosclerotic plaques. This episode hosts Dr. Sebastian Cifuentes, Dr. Randall DeMartino (), Dr. Pierce Massie, and Dr. Ross...
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Audible Bleeding editor Wen () is joined by 4th year medical student Nishi (), JVS editor Dr. Duncan (), JVS-CIT associate editor Dr. Jimenez to discuss some of our favorite articles in the JVS family of journals. This episode hosts Dr. Darling, Dr. Banks and Dr. Beck. Articles: Show Guests Dr. Jeremy Darling- integrated vascular surgery resident at BIDMC Dr. Charles Banks - integrated vascular surgery resident at UAB Dr. Adam Beck- Director of the division of vascular surgery and endovascular therapy, professor of surgery, director of...
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SAVC (Section on Ambulatory Vascular Care) formed a GPO to help SVS members in private practice access competitive pricing on medical supplies, devices, pharmaceuticals, and services. The podcast episode explores the history of the collaboration, the benefits for SVS private practice members, and how they can become involved. Guest Info Dr. Anil Hingorani is a previous President of the Eastern Vascular Society. He is currently the Chair of the Section on Ambulatory Vascular Care (SAVC) of the Society for Vascular Surgery. Dr. Naveed A. Rahman, Editor, is a Vascular Surgery Fellow...
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Audible Bleeding editor Wen () is joined by 5th-year general surgery resident Sasank Kalipatnapu () from UMass Chan Medical School, JVS editor Dr. Duncan (), JVS-VLD associate editor Dr. Hingorani () to discuss some of our favorite articles in the JVS family of journals. This episode hosts Dr. Omar Moussa-Pasha, Dr. David Ebertz, Dr. Rashad Bishara, and Dr. Ahmed Gaweesh, the authors of the following papers. Articles: Show Guests Dr. Omar Moussa-Pasha: Medical student at St Louis University. Dr. David Ebertz (): second year vascular...
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Resources: Rutherford Chapters (10th ed.): 174, 175, 177, 178 Prior Holding Pressure episode on AV access creation: The Society for Vascular Surgery: Clinical practice guidelines for the surgical placement and maintenance of arteriovenous hemodialysis access: KDOQI Clinical Practice Guideline for Vascular Access: 2019 Update: Venous Hypertension Definition A functioning AV circuit delivers high volume arterial flow towards a stenotic venous segment, causing buildup in pressure and venous hypertension. If there are few or no branching...
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In this episode, we spotlight editorials and abstracts from the Journal of Vascular Surgery Cases, Innovations, and Techniques (). Editorials and Abstracts are read by Authors as well as members of the . Guests: Juliet Blakeslee-Carter, MD () Neha Gupta () Ben Li, MD () Hosts: John Culhane () Follow us Learn more about us at and provide us with your feedback with our . *Gore is a financial sponsor of this podcast, which has been independently developed by the presenters and does not constitute medical advice from Gore....
info_outlineAuthors:
Sebouh Bazikian - PGY1 at Emory School of Medicine Integrated Vascular Surgery Program
Miguel F. Manzure - vascular surgery attending the University of Southern California Keck School of Medicine involved in complex limb preservation
Core Resources:
- Rutherford Chapters: 107, 108, 109 (Includes further information on anatomy), 112
Additional Resources:
- Relevant trials
- Relevant Audible Bleeding episodes
-
- Audible Bleeding Endovascular Basics: https://open.spotify.com/episode/7jDpkhGMauBslk8SBklCyB?si=75f0931773d24b91
- Audible Bleeding eBook, CLTI Chapter: https://adam-mdmph.quarto.pub/vascular-surgery-exam-prep/clti.html
- Anything else useful
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- WIFI: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/24126108/
- GLASS: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/31159978/
- Monophasic, Biphasic, Triphasic Waveforms: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/32667274/
Underlying disease featured in episode - peripheral arterial disease
- Pathophysiology/etiology
- narrowing of peripheral arteries caused by atherosclerotic plaques causing arterial insufficiency distal to the point of occlusion. This reduces oxygen supply to the muscles.
- When oxygen demand increases but cannot be met, it leads to an imbalance such as pain and poor wound healing.
- Risks: smoking, diabetes, hypertension, dyslipidemia, and older age
- Equal prevalence in men and women, peak incidence age 60-80
- Coexists with CAD, DM, stroke, Afib, and renal disease
- Patient Presentation
- 20-50% asymptomatic, rest can be intermittent claudication, rest pain, or tissue loss
- claudication=pain or discomfort felt in the legs due to a lack of blood flow, especially during physical activity.
- CLTI=chronic limb threatening ischemia: rest pain lasting greater than 2 weeks or nonhealing ulcers and gangrene
- Physical exam:
- decreased skin temperature, less hair on the legs, brittle nails, atrophied muscles, shiny skin, livedo reticularis.
- Absent or diminished pulses
- Buerger sign
- Diagnosis
- Ankle brachial index: <0.9=PAD. <0.4=multilevel disease associated with tissue loss. >1.3 can mean vessel calcification
- Toe pressures, toe brachial indexes, and transcutaneous oxygen measurement (TcPO2) if vessels calcified
- Duplex ultrasound: affordable and effective, can assess both anatomy and blood flow
- Can also assess degree of stenosis based on ratios of systolic and diastolic velocity
- Angiography: gold standard. Invasive and risks of infection, hematoma, pseudoaneurysms, and contrast nephropathy.
- Staging:
- WIFI - Wound, Ischemia, and Foot Infection (see additional resources)
- GLASS: Global Limb Anatomy Staging System (see additional resources)
- Treatment (Medical/Surgical)
- Lifestyle modification, smoking cessation, high-intensity statins, antiplatelet therapy, and management of other medial comorbidities like HTN and DM.
- Structured exercise program: 3 times weekly for 12 weeks
- Cilostazol: phosphodiesterase III inhibitor
- Endovascular and surgical revascularization
- Endovascular offer superior perioperative outcomes but lacks durability
- Surgical revascularization offer durability and less reinterventions, but more invasive
Indications for surgery:
- CLTI and lifestyle limiting claudication
Relevant anatomy:
- Femoral triangle
-
- inguinal ligament superior, the medial border of the sartorius muscle laterally, and the medial border of the adductor longus on the medially
- Contains neurovascular bundle (NAVEL)
- Adductor canal: bordered anteriorly by the sartorius, posteriorly by the adductor magnus and longus, and to the lateral side by the vastus medialis
- common femoral artery bifurcates into the profunda and the superficial femoral artery (SFA). SFA courses through adductor canal and turns into popliteal artery in the popliteal fossa
- GSV: originates at the ankle, tracts anterior to medial malleolus and then ascending the medial side of lower leg. Upon reaching the knee, it curves behind the medial condyles of the femur and tibia, continuing alongside the medial aspect of the thigh. Its journey culminates at the saphenofemoral junction
Preoperative preparation:
- Identifying inflow and outflow vessels, both should be free of significant disease
- preop CTA or angiogram
- Picking a conduit
- Best patency=autogenous: reversed GSV most common, others are small saphenous vein, cephalic vein, etc
- Prosthetic: polytetrafluoroethylene (PTFE)
- Cryopreserved vein
Surgical steps:
- Harvesting GSV (if GSV adequate as conduit)
- Dissected along its length, branches ligated, removed and reversed
- Can also be left insitu, so only proximal and distal aspects are mobilized, and valves are removed using valvulotome
- Should be at least 3mm in diameter and no significant disease (scarring, thickening)
- Arterial exposure
- Common femoral artery: lies in the medial third segment between the ASIS and the pubic symphysis. Longitudinal or oblique incision directly over the femoral artery pulse if present. ligate venous and lymphatic tributaries in the soft tissue. Open fascia along the medial margin of the sartorius muscle, retracting the sartorius muscle laterally exposes the underlying femoral sheath. CFA is located within the femoral sheath.
- Profunda and superficial femoral artery: trace the anterior surface of the CFA to where it bifurcates. The origin of the profunda is typically lateral
- Popliteal artery: medial longitudinal incision 1 to 2 cm behind the tibia's posterior border. Carefully to avoid GSV, dissect down to fascia to enter the popliteal fossa. The medial head of the gastrocnemius is retracted posteriorly, giving us a clear view of the popliteal fossa. popliteal artery is surrounded by paired popliteal veins with smaller bridging veins
- Tunneling and anastomosis
- Can be done anatomically or subcutaneously
- Must be careful not to twist the conduit
- Can do proximal anastomosis to pressurize vein prior to tunneling to minimize chance of twisting
- Clamp the vessels and heparinize
- Arteriotomy on femoral artery and anastomosis, same with popliteal artery distally
- Closure and ensure patency
- Optional completion angiogram
Postoperative care:
- Anticoagulation and/or antiplatelet therapy
- Monitor graft patency once discharged with duplex/ABI
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