At the University of Pittsburgh during the calendar year t986, an arterial injury occurred during harvesting in 20 (7.5%) of the 270 grafts used to perform kidney transplantation (KTx). Four cases required reconstruction, using extension iliac arterial allografts from cadaveric donors of the same bl
Renal vein reconstruction with interposition allografts in cadaveric renal transplantation
โ Scribed by Robert J. Stratta; Anthony M. D'Alessandro; Folkert O. Belzer
- Publisher
- Springer
- Year
- 1988
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 600 KB
- Volume
- 1
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0934-0874
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โฆ Synopsis
The short or injured renal vein in cadaveric transplantation is a surgical challenge. Over a 2-year period, we have performed ex vivo renal vein lengthening with an interposition vascular allograft in 17 recipients of cadaveric kidneys. Indications for renal vein extension allografts were a short right renal vein (N = 12), procurement injury to the vein (N = 4), and double renal vein (N = 1). In six cases (35.3%), ex vivo renal artery reconstruction was performed in combination with the venous repair. Our preferred approach is to employ allograft material in ex vivo reconstruction under cold storage conditions. Bench surgery ranged from 10 to 30 min, and the mean in situ anastomosis time was 20 min. The mean length of renal vein prior to reconstruction was 12 mm, and the mean length of venous interposition allograft after revascularization was 27 mm. There were no episodes of vascular thrombosis or primary nonfunction. Three patients (17.6%) required postoperative hemodialysis for acute tubular necrosis, which was subsequently resolved. The mean serum creatine at 1 month post-transplant was 1.7 mg/dl. These preliminary results suggest that ex vivo renal vein reconstruction with an interposition allograft is a safe and effective modality which should be added to the transplant surgeon's armamentarium in select cases.
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