Table 1.
Patient No. | Anatomic Region | Macroscopic Appearance | Indication for Surgery |
---|---|---|---|
1 | Right femoral artery | Heavily calcified plaque, subtotal occlusion | Severe claudication |
2 | Right carotid artery | Tight stenosis, fragile, ruptured plaque | Stroke right cerebral hemisphere 6 d before surgery, and yet new symptoms 5 d before surgery |
3 | Left carotid artery | Tight stenosis, fragile plaque with hematoma | TIA with symptoms from left hemisphere: dysphasia, right‐side hemiplegia (transitory weakness of right arm and leg). The patient had initial symptoms 3 d preop and even on the morning at the day of surgery |
4 | Left carotid artery | Very tight stenosis with fragile plaque | TIA 3 d preop with transitory right arm paresis, facial paresis, and dysphasia |
5 | Right femoral artery | Occlusion of the common femoral artery. Heavily calcified plaque with fresh thrombus | Severe claudication, walking distance 10 m, rest pain |
6 | Right femoral artery | Occlusive calcified plaque | Severe claudication |
TIA indicates transient ischemic attack.