RESUMO
Seventy-nine arteriovenous fistulas for periodic hemodialysis were created in 62 uremic patients: 64 primary vascular accesses and 15 salvage operations for malfunctioning fistulas. Sixty-three distal and 1 proximal arteriovenous fistulas between the radial artery and the cephalic vein, were created as primary vascular access. The utilization time of the primary arteriovenous fistulas was longer than 5 years in 34%, 3-4 years in 25% and 0-2 years in 41% of cases. Eleven fistulas evidenced thrombosis: a salvage operation (resection-anastomosis) was possible for 9 (89%). A salvage operation was possible for 100% of poor flow fistulas. The utilization's time of the salvage fistulas is longer than 5 years in 15%, 3-4 years in 15% and 0-2 years in 70% of cases.
Assuntos
Derivação Arteriovenosa Cirúrgica , Diálise Renal , Derivação Arteriovenosa Cirúrgica/efeitos adversos , Estudos de Avaliação como Assunto , Feminino , Humanos , Masculino , Pessoa de Meia-Idade , Artéria Radial/cirurgia , Reoperação , Trombose/etiologia , Fatores de TempoRESUMO
Of a total of 77 patients affected by hydatid cysts of the liver observed between 1983 and 1988, we examined a group of 25 patients with cysts that had migrated into the thorax. The main characteristic of these patients was the hydatid hepatic cyst, which was situated in the right hepatic lobe in every patient, involving one or more right hemithoracic structures. In 24 patients, there were different combinations of symptoms, but only ten were thoracic. In those with advanced intrathoracic evolution of the hydatid cyst, we not only found a destruction of the hemidiaphragm, but also the presence of pleural effusion, empyema, atelectasis and multiple pleural hydatidosis caused by the development of a cystic fistula in the pleural cavity. Analysis of these instances allowed us to see that ultrasonograms of the liver and roentgenograms of the thorax are often the most sensitive and reliable diagnostic procedures for showing the intrathoracic evolution of the cyst. We believe that the surgical treatment must be carried out with simultaneous right thoracoabdominal access, which, besides exposing the thoracic lesions, also permits adequate treatment of the hepatic hydatid cyst and the possible associated biliary complications.