Publication | Closed Access
Acute peripheral arterial and graft occlusion: treatment with selective infusion of urokinase and lysyl plasminogen.
27
Citations
0
References
1986
Year
Continuous UrokinaseVascular TraumaSurgeryThrombosisVenous ThrombosisStrokeHematologyVascular SurgeryArterial OcclusionAtherosclerosisSelective InfusionAcute Peripheral ArterialFibrinolysisVascular BiologyArterial Disease TreatmentPeripheral Artery DiseaseAcute IschemiaPeripheral InterventionArterial ReconstructionsLysyl PlasminogenVascular AccessMedicineAnesthesiology
Thirty-five patients hospitalized for recent angiographically documented arterial occlusion in the legs (27 femoropopliteal arteries and eight grafts) benefited from local fibrinolytic therapy delivered at the site of the occlusion with a 4- or 5-F catheter. This therapy combined a continuous urokinase (UK) infusion of 1,000 U/kg/hour and a lysyl plasminogen (LYS-PLG) infusion of 15 microkatals every 30 minutes. Angiographically confirmed lysis was obtained in 85% of the cases. Only 3% of the patients had major and 6% had minor groin hematomas. Only two patients had concentrations of fibrinogen as low as 100 mg/dl. Intravascular infusion of UK-LYS-PLG is as effective as streptokinase. Its excellent tolerance makes it a good alternative in the treatment of acute ischemia in the lower limbs.