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. 1987 Dec;154(6):671-5.
doi: 10.1016/0002-9610(87)90241-8.

The critical hypogastric circulation

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The critical hypogastric circulation

J I Iliopoulos et al. Am J Surg. 1987 Dec.

Abstract

Eleven patients had ischemic complications secondary to ligation, hypoperfusion, exclusion, or thrombosis of the hypogastric arteries after aortoiliac reconstruction or spontaneous aortoiliac thrombosis. Ligation of one hypogastric artery resulted in persistent ipsilateral buttock claudication in three patients. Bilateral acute hypogastric artery ischemia occurred in eight patients and resulted in paralysis in all eight patients, buttock necrosis in four patients, anal and bladder sphincteric dysfunction in two patients, and colorectal ischemia in three patients. Five of these patients (63 percent) died. The mortality rate was 100 percent when buttock necrosis developed. In most of these patients, the neurologic deficit suggested ischemic injury of the lumbosacral plexus rather than spinal cord ischemia. These complications occurred despite patent bypass grafts to the iliac or femoral vessels. These observations suggest that it is essential to maintain patency of the hypogastric vessels in all aortoiliac reconstructions.

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