Methods: Twenty-three patients (14 males, 9 females, mean age 67.56 years; range 49 to 81 years) who underwent carotid endarterectomy with external jugular vein patch plasty within the past 12 years were routinely followed for neurological events and restenosis. After early control, duplex ultrasonography was added to the routine controls to detect restenosis.
Results: One patient died due to pneumonia and sepsis in the early period. Two patients died due to several causes which were not directly related to surgery in the late period. One patient had minor stroke; however, the operated carotid artery was not responsible for the event. Duplex ultrasonography showed mild to moderate restenoses in three asymptomatic patients (15%).
Conclusion: External jugular vein is a good alternative to saphenous vein and synthetic patching in multivascular atherosclerotic patients, in particular.
Of the patients, 19 had 70 to 95% carotid stenosis as confirmed by duplex ultrasonography. Eight of these patients had 70 to 99% stenosis as evidenced by magnetic resonance angiography. In another eight patients, four had previous a duplex diagnosis and carotid stenosis of 80 to 99% was shown by digital subtraction angiography. In addition, radiological examinations demonstrated that 22 patients had calcifications, three had plaque ulcers, and three had a thrombus.
Four of the patients were operated for bilateral carotid stenosis. Three of these patients underwent a second operation for the contralateral side four to seven days after the first operation. One of the patients was operated for the contralateral side seven years after the first operation, as severe stenosis was defined on routine controls. Fifteen of the rest of the patients were operated for the left side and four patients for the right side. All patients were operated by a single surgeon. All patients received acetylsalicylate 100 mg/day before and after the operation.
All patients were operated under the general anesthesia. Two legs were prepared for saphenous vein to prevent waste of time if EJV was not suitable for patching. An incision was made anterior to the sternocleidomastoid muscle. After platysma was passed, EJV was explored and a 5 cm segment was prepared (Figure 1). It was used, unless its diameter was less than 4 mm. Then, it was everted with a fine penset to expose the endothelial surface with blood flow after patching and put in heparinized isotonique (10 U/mL). Common carotid artery (CCA), internal carotid artery (ICA), and external carotid artery (ECA) were prepared and controlled with silicon loops. Arteriotomy was made from CCA to the ICA three minutes after systemic heparinization (100 U/kg). Then, an outlying shunt was inserted from the CCA to the ICA. Following endarterectomy and distal intimal fixation with a 7/0 polypropylene suture material, double layered everted EJV was continuously sutured to the arteriotomy with 6/0 polypropylene suturing beginning from the distal end (Figure 2). Before arteriotomy was closed, the outlying shunt was immediately extirpated and residual air was evacuated. The first blood flow from the CCA was diverted to the ECA and then the ICA was opened. After bleeding control, incisions were closed in a routine way and a silicon drain was inserted.
The mean follow-up after CEA operation was 70±43 (range, 11 to 147) months. All patients were evaluated for neurological and monocular symptoms at one week, one month and every six months after discharge. Operated carotid arteries were controlled with duplex ultrasonography at one week and six months. After 12 months, follow-up examination and duplex ultrasonography was performed annually. The duplex scan criteria of 16 to 49% stenosis of ICA were peak systolic velocity (PSV) less than 140 cm/sec and end-diastolic velocity (EDV) less than 140 cm/sec. For 50 to 79% stenosis of ICA, PSV 140 cm/sec or more and EDV less than 140 cm/sec and for 80-99% ICA stenosis, PSV more than 140 cm/sec and EDV more than 140 cm/sec were predefined measurements.[11]
In the late period, there was no EJV patch aneurysm (Figure 3). One of the patients died from leukemia two years after the operation. Another patient died due to myocardial infarction one year after the operation. A 70-year-old male patient had ipsilateral minor stroke two years after the operation. As duplex ultrasonography showed no more than 50% stenosis and distal occlusion was defined on a watershed area of the middle cerebral artery by magnetic resonance angiography, he was treated conservatively. Of surviving asymptomatic 20 patients, we also found ICA stenosis less than 50% in one patient and 50 to 79% ICA stenosis in an 80-year-old male patient in the soonest duplex ultrasonography.
Furthermore, as autogenous patch materials such as saphenous vein, common facial vein (CFV), and EJV have an intimal surface, they can reduce the risk for thrombosis on the arteriotomy region and they are also more resistant to infection. However, some authors have suggested that synthetic patches such as Dacron, PTFE, and polyurethane are more robust and more resistant to the development of aneurysmal dilatation and ruptures.[13] In general, saphenous veins are used for coronary artery and peripheral arterial bypass graft surgery. Access to the EJV can be accomplished through the same incision during CEA, which possibly prevents incision-related morbidities in diabetic and obese patients, in particular.[14] The fact that there is no extra incision serves another advantage: namely, the operation can be performed under cervical blockage or local anesthesia.
In a series of 11 patients, Aslım et al.[15] showed that it was safe to use EJV as a patch material for local complications (i.e. bleeding, hematoma, edema, infection) during CEA.[15] No difference was found in non-randomized studies that compared patient groups in which saphenous veins or everted neck veins were used for patching in CEA operations for moderate and severe restenosis rate and stroke prevention.[7] It was reported that EJV was as afe and reliable material and the incidence of local complications and neurological deficits were similar to the PTFEs.[16] Long-term freedom from ipsilateral neurological events and severe restenosis was improved (up to 90%) in patients undergoing CEA, in which either a saphenous vein or cervical vein (CFV, EJV) was used for patching.[17] In our small series of patients, we observed no neurological event related to the EJV patch and found silent mild to moderate restenosis in 15% patients during followup. However, this method can be challenging in certain patients who have an arteriotomy length of >5 cm. As a cervical vein cannot be adequate to close arteriotomy, synthetic patchs should be available in the operation room and legs should be prepared for saphenous vein harvesting in these cases.
In the present study, we used two-layer EJV, as one-layer EJV is thin and weak for carotid patching. Despite its aforementioned advantages, its use requires some technical details. As EJV patch has two layers and it can be twisted, it should be sutured carefully at the distal and proximal ends, in particular, by passing sutures through the both layers. Meticulous hemostasis is also critical, since blood oozing between the layers of EJV may cause a patch hematoma. Doppler ultrasonography is helpful for the evaluation of the patch hematoma within the first week after the operation. In these cases, stent implantation to the patch hematoma segment of carotid artery may be a good choice.
In conclusion, external jugular vein patches with an intimal layer can reduce the risk for thrombosis and restenosis, and neurological events during the perioperative period, eventually. It also precludes another incision for patch materials. The integrity of the saphenous vein is preserved by the help of this graft in patients with generalized atherosclerosis with coronary and peripheral atherosclerosis.
Declaration of conflicting interests
The authors declared no conflicts of interest with
respect to the authorship and/or publication of this
article.
Funding
The authors received no financial support for the
research and/or authorship of this article.
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