• Title/Summary/Keyword: Brachial artery

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A Brachial Artery Pseudoaneurysm Treated with a Bifurcated Y-Shaped Artificial Vessel Graft

  • Joon seok Oh;Seokchan Eun
    • Archives of Plastic Surgery
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    • v.49 no.6
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    • pp.755-759
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    • 2022
  • Brachial artery aneurysms are rare diseases that may be caused by infection or trauma. We report a case of a 71-year-old man who presented with a mass in his right antecubital fossa that increased in size slowly over time. Three years ago, the patient underwent ascending and total-arch replacement with artificial vessel graft to treat aortic root and ascending aorta aneurysm. Preoperative physical examination of right upper extremity showed a nonpulsatile mass with normal pulse of axillary, brachial, and radial arteries. The mass was removed and brachial artery reconstruction was done initially using saphenous vein graft. Two months later, the patient revisited with recurrent pseudoaneurysm, involving the bifurcation point of brachial artery. Aneurysm was totally resected and the brachial artery was reconstructed by interposition graft using a bifurcated GORE-TEX artificial vessel graft. The patient healed without complication and no recurrence was observed. Artificial vessel graft is an available option for reconstruction, and revascularization of vessel defect after excision of brachial artery aneurysm may involve bifurcation point.

Traumatic Subclavian Artery Rupture (외상성 쇄골하 동맥 파열)

  • 김해균
    • Journal of Chest Surgery
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    • v.25 no.11
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    • pp.1278-1281
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    • 1992
  • We have experienced two cases of traumatic subclavian artery rupture at the department of thoracic and cardiovascular surgery, Youngdong Severance hospital, Yonsei University college of medicine. One was combined with brachial plexus injury and the other was combined with brachial plexus injury and subclavian vein rupture. They were treated with graft interposition after segmental resection of ruptured subclavian artery and neurorrhaphy for brachial plexus injury. Post operative courses were not eventful.

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Late-onset Brachial Artery Occlusion caused by Subclavian Artery Stenosis after Clavicular Fracture: A Case Report

  • Cho, Chul-Hyun;Song, Kwang-Soon;Min, Byung-Woo;Bae, Ki-Cheor
    • The Academic Congress of Korean Shoulder and Elbow Society
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    • 2008.03a
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    • pp.175-175
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    • 2008
  • We report a rare case of late-onset brachial artery occlusion caused by subclavian artery stenosis with excessive scar tissue after open reduction and plate fixation for clavicular fracture. When he referred to us, the right hand were pale and the radial and ulnar pulses at the wrist were absent. CT-angiogram showed compression of subclavian artery by excessive scar tissue beneath the fracture site and angiography revealed stenosis of subclavian artery with thrombus and complete obstruction of blood flow in the brachial artery with emboli. Therefore, we performed embolectomy. 2 years after operation, patient was essentially asymptomatic except mild pain after long standing elevation of arm. We recommend that minimal soft tissue dissection should be needed in the operative treatment of clavicular fracture, especially soft tissue beneath the clavicle should be protected maximally.

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Training of Microanastomosis with Chicken Wing Brachial Artery (닭 날개 혈관을 이용한 혈관문합술의 교육)

  • Kwon, Soon Sung;Jeong, Jae Hoon;Chang, Hak;Minn, Kyung Won
    • Archives of Plastic Surgery
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    • v.34 no.2
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    • pp.274-277
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    • 2007
  • Purpose: Microsuturing is a difficult job for beginners of microsurgery. It is because they are not familiar with microscopic environment and, it needs much time for them to get used to microanastomosis. Before the real microsurgery, sometimes a surgeon wants rehearsal. But, microsurgical exercise has been performed with surgical glove, silastic drain or rat femoral artery. Rat femoral artery is a very good training material. But, it needs animal laboratory, anesthesia and its keeping facilities. And the surgeon should appoint the time to exercise with the laboratory. Methods: We used chicken wing brachial artery for education material of microsuturing. The artery is 5 cm long and the diameter is about 1 mm. Monofilament 10-0 was used for suture material. Results: Six persons of Seoul National University medical school students and one resident attended in this program. Each of them performed arterial anastomosis ten times. They were satisfied with chicken wing brachial artery for anastomosis training under the magnification environment. Conclusion: We think that chicken wing brachial artery is a very cheap and an effective training material for the beginners of microsurgery.

Recurrent True Brachial Artery Aneurysm

  • Ko, Seong-Min;Han, Il-Yong;Cho, Kwang-Hyun;Lee, Yang-Haeng;Park, Kyung-Taek;Kang, Mee-Sun
    • Journal of Chest Surgery
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    • v.44 no.5
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    • pp.364-367
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    • 2011
  • True aneurysm of the brachial artery is a rare disease entity. The mechanism of aneurysm formation is considered to be compression of the arterial wall, producing contusion of the media and subsequent weakness of the wall and fusiform dilatation. It can be caused by arteriosclerotic, congenital, and metabolic disorders, and can be associated with diseases such as Kawasaki's disease. Doppler ultrasonography, computed tomography, arteriography, and selective upper extremity angiography may be performed for establishing the diagnosis of aneurysm. The best therapeutic option is operative repair, and it should be performed without any delay, in order to prevent upper extremity ischemic or thrombotic sequelae. Here, we report a case of recurrent brachial artery aneurysm with review of the literature.

Automatic Extraction of Blood Flow Area in Brachial Artery for Suspicious Hypertension Patients from Color Doppler Sonography with Fuzzy C-Means Clustering

  • Kim, Kwang Baek;Song, Doo Heon;Yun, Sang-Seok
    • Journal of information and communication convergence engineering
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    • v.16 no.4
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    • pp.258-263
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    • 2018
  • Color Doppler sonography is a useful tool for examining blood flow and related indices. However, it should be done by well-trained operator, that is, operator subjectivity exists. In this paper, we propose an automatic blood flow area extraction method from brachial artery that would be an essential building block of computer aided color Doppler analyzer. Specifically, our concern is to examine hypertension suspicious (prehypertension) patients who might develop their symptoms to established hypertension in the future. The proposed method uses fuzzy C-means clustering as quantization engine with careful seeding of the number of clusters from histogram analysis. The experiment verifies that the proposed method is feasible in that the successful extraction rates are 96% (successful in 48 out of 50 test cases) and demonstrated better performance than K-means based method in specificity and sensitivity analysis but the proposed method should be further refined as the retrospective analysis pointed out.

Retrieval of a dislodged and dismounted coronary stent; using a rendezvous and snare technique at the brachial artery level via femoral approach

  • Jeong, Min-Woong;Sohn, Chang-Bae;Kim, Su Hong;Park, Jong-Ik;Park, Se-Ryeong;Min, Jun-Sik
    • Journal of Yeungnam Medical Science
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    • v.33 no.2
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    • pp.138-141
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    • 2016
  • Coronary stent dislodgement during percutaneous coronary intervention, which occurs when the stent is passed through tortuous and calcified lesions, is not a rare complication. Without proper treatment, such as fixing with another stent in the coronary artery or removing the undeployed stent from the coronary artery or systemic artery system, this complication can cause serious problems. We experienced the unusual situation of a dismounted and dislodged coronary stent, in which retrograde retrieval to the radial artery was impossible during transradial coronary intervention. We report on use of a rendezvous and snare technique at the brachial artery level via femoral puncture, which resulted in resolution without surgery.

Evaluation of Significance on the Brachial-ankle arterial pulse wave velocity And Cerebral Artery Vascular Stenosis (상완-발목 맥파 전달 속도와 뇌동맥 혈관 협착과의 유의성 평가)

  • Kim, Ji-Yul;Ye, Soo-Young
    • Journal of the Korean Society of Radiology
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    • v.13 no.6
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    • pp.873-878
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    • 2019
  • Cerebrovascular disease is one of the three major causes of death in Korea. Since these diseases are associated with atherosclerosis, the diagnosis of atherosclerotic factors should be presented. In this study, we evaluated the relationship between brachial-ankle arterial pulse wave velocity, cerebral artery vascular stenosis, blood pressure, obesity, and abdominal obesity by age group. The significance of cerebral artery stenosis and age group. The risk factors of atherosclerosis, such as blood pressure, obesity, and abdominal obesity, were significant in all age groups. When the pulse wave velocity of the brachial-ankle artery was increased, the cerebral artery stenosis was distributed in 57.3% of the total test subjects. If the arterial stiffness is suspected during the measurement of the pulse wave velocity of the brachial ankle artery, We recommend suspected vascular stenosis and perform a cerebral artery angiography. It is suggested that the data will be used as a baseline data for similar studies after evaluating the significance of blood pressure, obesity, and abdominal obesity as risk factors of atherosclerosis.

The Correlation of Pulse Wave Velocity and Atherosclerotic Risk Factor in Stroke Patients

  • Jin, Bok Hee;Han, Min Ho
    • Korean Journal of Clinical Laboratory Science
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    • v.47 no.1
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    • pp.28-34
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    • 2015
  • Pulse wave velocity (PWV) is used to non-invasively estimate the severity of arteriosclerosis by measuring arterial stiffness. Increased arterial stiffness measured by PWV stands for progressive arteriosclerosis and is caused by atherosclerotic risk factors. This study is focused on how brachial-ankle pulse wave velocity (baPWV) is related to the leading risk factors for arteriosclerosis or atherosclerosis. Subjects were 114, 69 males and 45 females who are in 60's and had baPWV test for acute stroke. The results are as follows: the group with increased arterial stiffness showed significant increase in HbA1c, total cholesterol, BSBP (brachial artery systolic blood pressure), BDBP (brachial artery diastolic blood pressure), CSBP (central artery systolic blood pressure), CDBP (central artery diastolic blood pressure), augmentation index (AIx) and diabetes mellitus. Correlation analysis between baPWV and atherosclerotic risk factor showed significant relationship in age, HbA1c, LDL cholesterol, BSBP, BDBP, CSBP, CDBP and augmentation index. baPWV was independently related to age and BSBP in multiple linear regression analysis. The group with increased arterial stiffness was independently related to BDBP in multiple logistic regression analysis. This study might be meaningful in evaluating the relationship between arterial stiffness and atherosclerotic risk factor in a new way, and be helped to make various studies for cardiovascular disease.

Morphological Assessment of Cadaveric Radial, Brachial and Subclavian Arteries : A Neurointerventional Approach

  • Yilmaz, Ali;Ozkul, Ayca;Shin, Dong Seong;Im, Soo-Bin;Yoon, Seok-Mann;Kim, Bum-Tae
    • Journal of Korean Neurosurgical Society
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    • v.58 no.6
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    • pp.499-503
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    • 2015
  • Objective : The transradial catheterization (TRC) is becoming widespread, primarily for neurointerventions. Therefore, the evaluation of radial artery puncture in clinical practice and a better understanding of the anatomy are important to improve the safety of neuroendovascular surgery. Methods : Ten formalin-fixed adult Korean cadavers were dissected to expose radial artery (RA), brachial artery (BrA) and subclvian artery (ScA), bilaterally. Vessel lengths and diameters were meaured using a caliper and distance between the specific point of vessels and the anatomical landmarks including the radial styloid process, the medial epicondyle of the humerus, the sternoclavicular joint, and the vertebral artery orifice were also measured. Results : The average length between the radial (RAPS) and the BrA puncture sites (BrAPS) and between the vertebral artery orifice (VAO) and the BrA bifurcation (BrAB) did not differ between sides (p>0.05). The average length between the radial styloid process (RSP) and the RAPS was $13.41{\pm}2.19mm$, and the RSP was $26.85{\pm}2.47mm$ from the median nerve (MN). The mean length between the medial epicondyle (ME) and the BrAPS as $44.23{\pm}5.47mm$, whereas the distance between the ME and the MN was $42.23{\pm}4.77mm$. The average VAO-ScA angle was $70.94{\pm}6.12^{\circ}$, and the length between the ScA junction (SCJ) and the VAO was $60.30{\pm}8.48mm$. Conclusion : This study provides basic anatomical information about the radial artery and the brachial route and can help improving new techniques, selection of size and shape of catheters for TRC. This can help neurointerventionists who adopt a transradial neuroendovascular approach and offers comprehensive and safe care to their patients.