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      Endovascular management of aortoiliac artery occlusive disease with pseudo-stenosis of the external iliac artery

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          Abstract

          In recent years, endovascular treatment has become the first-line revascularisation method for aortoiliac artery occlusive disease. Rarely, aortoiliac artery occlusive disease may be associated with stenosis of the external iliac artery (EIA) that suggested pseudo-stenosis. We describe a case of aortoiliac artery occlusive disease with EIA stenosis without calcification or atheroma. Stent grafts were inserted from the abdominal aorta to the bilateral common iliac arteries. Pre-operative computed tomography and intravascular ultrasound findings confirmed the absence of calcification or atheroma in both EIA, suggesting that the EIA had developed pseudo-stenosis. Following endovascular treatment, the EIA diameter recovered only with balloon dilation after inflow improvement. Consideration is necessary when placing an easy stent graft in the narrow EIA during endovascular treatment for aortoiliac artery occlusive disease with EIA stenosis to avoid a potential stent graft diameter mismatch.

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          Endovascular treatment of TransAtlantic Inter-Society Consensus D aortoiliac occlusive disease using unibody bifurcated endografts

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            ESC guidelines on the diagnosis and treatment of peripheral arterial diseases, in collaboration with the European Society for Vascular Surgery (ESVS)

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              Treatment for aortoiliac bifurcation disease by balloon-expandable covered stent; “Double-D” molding technique

              Appropriate endovascular treatment for aortic bifurcation lesions remains unclear. Incomplete apposition and radial mismatch have not been resolved to date. We treated two cases of aortic bifurcation lesions including common iliac aneurysms with balloon-expandable covered stents with “Double-D molding technique (DDMT).” This is the method. First, standard kissing stent technique with two balloon-expandable covered stents for aortic bifurcation lesions is performed. Second, either covered stent post-dilated with a larger size percutaneous transluminal angioplasty (PTA) balloon before the other covered stent also post-dilated with the same larger size PTA balloon. Kissing balloon technique was performed with the two previous size PTA balloons. Good double-D shape configuration is observed. This DDMT could improve the radial mismatch of the kissing covered stents to distal aortic wall. 〈 Learning objective: The treatment of aortoiliaic bifurcation disease including iliac aneurysms with balloon expandable covered stents using “double D-shape molding technique” is safe and effective.〉
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                Author and article information

                Contributors
                Journal
                J Surg Case Rep
                J Surg Case Rep
                jscr
                Journal of Surgical Case Reports
                Oxford University Press
                2042-8812
                February 2024
                13 February 2024
                13 February 2024
                : 2024
                : 2
                : rjae078
                Affiliations
                Department of Vascular Surgery , Shizuoka Red Cross Hospital , Shizuoka 420-0853, Japan
                Department of Vascular Surgery , Shizuoka Red Cross Hospital , Shizuoka 420-0853, Japan
                Department of Vascular Surgery , Shizuoka Red Cross Hospital , Shizuoka 420-0853, Japan
                Department of Vascular Surgery , Shizuoka Red Cross Hospital , Shizuoka 420-0853, Japan
                Author notes
                Corresponding author. Department of Vascular Surgery, Shizuoka Red Cross Hospital, 8-2, Ottemachi, Aoi-Ku, Shizuoka 420-0853, Japan. E-mail: tshintani@ 123456yb4.so-net.ne.jp
                Article
                rjae078
                10.1093/jscr/rjae078
                10871762
                38370602
                aae021e9-44cd-4caa-8671-8245ccf40a42
                Published by Oxford University Press and JSCR Publishing Ltd. © The Author(s) 2024.

                This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License ( https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted reuse, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.

                History
                : 10 January 2024
                : 27 January 2024
                Page count
                Pages: 3
                Categories
                Case Report
                AcademicSubjects/MED00910
                jscrep/0180

                aortoiliac artery occlusive disease,pseudo-stenosis,external iliac artery

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