Japanese Journal of Cardiovascular Surgery  2015;44(2):108-111

doi:10.4326/jjcvs.44.108

Revascularization of the Superior Mesenteric Artery in an Intestinal Angina

Masanori Sakaguchi ; Tadahiro Murakami ; Takumi Ishikawa ; Hirokazu Minamimura

Keywords

intestinal angina; revascularization; saphenous vein graft

Country

Japan

Language

Japanese

Abstract

A 69-year-old woman suffered from postprandial abdominal pain and hematochezia. Colonoscopy suggested ischemic colitis, and intestinal angina was diagnosed by multirow-detector computed tomography (CT), which showed occlusion of the superior mesenteric artery (SMA). On enhanced CT, there was extensive calcification on the aortic wall and aortic expansion and several mural thrombi in the thoracoabdominal and abdominal aorta, as well as severe stenoses in the bilateral common iliac arteries. A bypass from the right renal artery, which was the only artery without significant stenosis of the major branches of the abdominal artery, to the SMA, was created using a saphenous vein graft. Postoperatively, the postprandial abdominal pain disappeared, and the patient was discharged after a good postoperative course.