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Dive into the research topics where Anco C. Vahl is active.

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Featured researches published by Anco C. Vahl.


Journal of Endovascular Therapy | 2003

Cine MRI assessment of aortic aneurysm dynamics before and after endovascular repair.

A.W. Floris Vos; Willem Wisselink; J. Tim Marcus; Anco C. Vahl; Jan A. Rauwerda

Purpose: To evaluate stent-graft and aneurysm wall motions during the cardiac cycle using cine magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) to identify mechanisms of long-term failure of endovascular aneurysm repair (EVAR). Methods: Prior to and after EVAR in 7 patients with abdominal aortic aneurysms (AAA), 12 MRI images per cardiac cycle were acquired in transverse, sagittal, and coronal planes of the aneurysm. Two independent observers blinded to the aim of the study manually traced stent-graft and aneurysm wall contours. Translation was defined as the maximal displacement of the contours in the peak-systolic image compared to the end-diastolic image. Aneurysm wall motions before and after repair were compared. Stent-graft and aneurysm configuration changes during the cardiac cycle were evaluated. The relation between translation and the degree of angulation of the stent-graft was calculated. Results: The anteroposterior translation of the aneurysm decreased from a median 1.05 mm (range <0.5–1.29) before EVAR to within pixel size (<0.5 mm) after EVAR (p=0.04). The cranial-caudal translation of the aneurysm increased from a median 1.01 mm (range <0.5–1.51) before to 1.69 mm (range 1.1–1.99) after EVAR (p=0.02). In 4 stent-grafts, bending during cardiac systole was observed at the site of maximal angulation of the device. In transverse sections, 2-dimensional pulsatile wall motion of the aneurysm was 0.25 cm2 (range 0.07–0.29) before and 0.17 cm2 (range 0.07–0.42) after EVAR (p=0.79). No pulsatility of the stent-graft itself was observed. The correlation coefficient between angulation of the stent-graft and the increase in cranial-caudal translation after EVAR was 0.67 (p>0.05). Conclusions: After EVAR, increased longitudinal translation of both the aneurysm and stent-graft was observed, indicating downward pulling forces at the proximal fixation site. Secondly, increased bending was seen at the site of maximal angulation, which implies a risk of metal fatigue and fabric damage at sites of stent-graft angulation.


European Journal of Vascular and Endovascular Surgery | 2014

A Decision Aid Regarding Treatment Options for Patients with an Asymptomatic Abdominal Aortic Aneurysm: A Randomised Clinical Trial

Anouk M. Knops; Dirk T. Ubbink; R. Balm; M.J.W. Koelemay; Anco C. Vahl; A.J. de Nie; P.J. Van den Akker; M.C.M. Willems; N.A. Koedam; J.C.J.M. de Haes; Patrick M. Bossuyt; Dink A. Legemate

OBJECTIVE Abdominal aortic aneurysm patients tend to be informed inconsistently and incompletely about their disorder and the treatment options open to them. The objective of this trial was to evaluate whether these patients are better informed and experience less decisional conflict regarding their treatment options after viewing a decision aid. DESIGN A six-centre, randomised clinical trial comparing a decision aid plus regular information versus regular information from the surgeon. METHODS Included patients had recently been diagnosed with an asymptomatic abdominal aortic aneurysm at least 4 cm in diameter. The decision aid consisted of a one-time viewing of an interactive CD-ROM elaborating on elective surgery versus watchful waiting. Generally, the decision aid advised patients with aneurysms less than 5.5 cm to agree to watchful waiting, for larger aneurysms the decision aid provided insight into the balance of benefit and harm of surgical and conservative approaches, taking into account age, co-morbidity and size of the aneurysm. The primary outcome was patient decisional conflict measured at 1 month follow-up (Decisional Conflict Scale). Secondary outcomes were patient knowledge, anxiety and satisfaction. RESULTS In 178 aneurysm patients, decisional conflict scores did not differ significantly between the decision aid and the regular information groups (22 vs. 24 on the 0-100 Decisional Conflict Scale; p = .33). Patients in the decision aid group had significantly better knowledge (10.0 vs. 9.4 out of 13 points; p = .04), whereas anxiety levels (4.4 and 5.0 on a 0-21 scale; p = .73) and satisfaction scores (74 and 73 on a 0-100 scale; p = .81) were similar in both groups. CONCLUSION In addition to regular patient-surgeon communication, a decision aid helps to share treatment decisions with abdominal aortic aneurysm patients by increasing their knowledge about the disorder and available treatment options without raising anxiety levels; however, it does not reduce decisional conflict, nor does it improve satisfaction.


Journal of Endovascular Therapy | 2010

Hybrid Treatment of a Ruptured Diverticulum of Kommerell

Jan Bosma; Alexander D. Montauban van Swijndregt; Anco C. Vahl

Purpose: To report a patient with a ruptured diverticulum of Kommerell and to discuss treatment options and complications. Case Report: An 82-year-old woman with no prior medical history was diagnosed with a ruptured aneurysmal proximal aberrant right subclavian artery (diverticulum of Kommerell). She was treated with a carotid-subclavian bypass, a thoracic aortic stent-graft covering both subclavian orifices, and a vascular plug in the proximal right subclavian artery. After an initially uneventful recovery, the patient developed delayed ischemic esophageal ulcerations and subsequent perforation at 6 weeks postoperatively, leading to mediastinitis and stent-graft infection. Conclusion: A hybrid approach may be of value in cases of ruptured diverticulum of Kommerell. However, despite the anticipated reduction in perioperative mortality, this technique still yields a considerable risk of postoperative complications and mortality.


Annals of Vascular Surgery | 2014

Comparative Study of Venous Arterialization and Pedal Bypass in a Patient Cohort with Critical Limb Ischemia

Michiel A. Schreve; Robert C. Minnee; Jan Bosma; Vanessa J. Leijdekkers; Mirza M. Idu; Anco C. Vahl

OBJECTIVES Patients with critical limb ischemia (CLI) have a poor life expectancy, and aggressive revascularization is accepted as a means to maintain their independence in the end stage of life. The goal of this case-control study was to evaluate the clinical outcome of distal venous arterialization and compare this with pedal bypass surgery in patients with CLI, and to identify potential risk factors that could be used to effectively identify patients at high risk of graft occlusion and amputation. METHODS A retrospective cohort of patients was treated for CLI using venous arterialization or pedal bypass between 2007 and 2012. Kaplan-Meier and Cox regression analyses were used to evaluate predictors for limb salvage and patency. RESULTS In 40 patients with CLI, 21 venous arterializations and 19 pedal bypasses were performed. In the venous arterialization group, early occlusion was 15%, 1-year patency was 71%, and limb salvage was 53%. In the PB group, early occlusion was 23%, one-year patency was 75% and limb salvage was 47%. The only independent risk factor for limb salvage in multivariate analysis was bypass occlusion (P<0.001). CONCLUSIONS Limb salvage after venous arterialization was equal to limb salvage after pedal bypass surgery in this clinical comparative study.


Journal of Endovascular Therapy | 2003

How to exclude the dilated false lumen in patients after a type B aortic dissection? The cork in the bottleneck.

Maartje C. Loubert; Victor van der Hulst; Cees De Vries; Kees Bloemendaal; Anco C. Vahl

Purpose: To report techniques for excluding the dilated false lumen associated with chronic type B aortic dissection following placement of a stent-graft in the true lumen. Case Reports: Two patients underwent stent-graft implantation for a dilated false lumen after chronic aortic dissection, but the false lumen was not excluded from the circulation by this procedure. The false lumen was obliterated in one case with Greenfield filters and detachable balloons placed above a renal artery orifice that was perfused via the false lumen. This acted like “a cork in the bottleneck” to block retrograde flow into the thoracic portion of the false lumen above the blockade. In the other patient, an occluder device was used as the “cork.” In both cases, a good result was obtained. The occluder device is preferred because deployment is more controllable. Conclusions: An occluder device may be used like a cork in a bottle to exclude the dilated false lumen in the thoracic aorta after a type B dissection.


Phlebology | 2016

Clarivein mechanochemical ablation of the great and small saphenous vein: Early treatment outcomes of two hospitals

Charlotte L. Deijen; Michiel A. Schreve; Jan Bosma; A. Jorianne de Nie; Vanessa J. Leijdekkers; Peter J van den Akker; Anco C. Vahl

Objectives Mechanochemical endovenous ablation is a novel technique for the treatment of great saphenous vein and small saphenous vein incompetence which combines mechanical injury of the endothelium with simultaneous infusion of liquid sclerosant. The main objective of this study was to evaluate early occlusion. Methods All consecutive patients who were eligible for the treatment with mechanochemical endovenous ablation were included. Inclusion period was from the introduction of the device in the hospitals (September 2011 and December 2011) until December 2012. Results A total of 449 patients were included representing 570 incompetent veins. In 506 treated veins, duplex ultrasonography was performed at follow-up: 457 veins (90%) were occluded at a follow-up of 6 to 12 weeks. In univariate and multivariate analysis, failure of treated great saphenous vein was associated with saphenofemoral junction incompetence (OR 4; 95% CI 1.0–17.1, P = 0.049). Conclusions The Clarivein device proves to be safe and had a high short-term technical effectiveness.


Journal of Endovascular Therapy | 2015

Dutch Randomized Trial Comparing Standard Catheter-Directed Thrombolysis and Ultrasound-Accelerated Thrombolysis for Arterial Thromboembolic Infrainguinal Disease (DUET):

A. Marjolein Schrijver; Marc van Leersum; Bram Fioole; Michel M. P. J. Reijnen; Arjan W. J. Hoksbergen; Anco C. Vahl; Jean-Paul P.M. de Vries

Purpose: To report the results of the Dutch randomized trial comparing standard catheter-directed and ultrasound-accelerated thrombolysis (UST) for the treatment of arterial thromboembolic occlusions. Methods: The DUET study ( controlled-trials.com ; identifier ISRCTN72676102) was designed to assess whether UST can reduce therapy time significantly compared with standard thrombolysis (ST). Sixty patients (44 men; mean age 64 years) with recently (7–49 days) thrombosed infrainguinal native arteries or bypass grafts causing acute limb ischemia (Rutherford category I or IIa) were randomized to ST (n=32) or UST (n=28). The primary outcome was the duration of thrombolysis needed for uninterrupted flow (>95% thrombus lysis), with outflow through at least 1 below-the-knee artery. Continuous data are presented as means ± standard deviations. Results: Thrombolysis was significantly faster in the UST group (17.7±2.0 hours) than in the ST group (29.5±3.2 hours, p=0.009) and required significantly fewer units of urokinase (2.8±1.6×106 IU in the ST group vs. 1.8±1.0×106 IU in the UST group, p=0.01) for uninterrupted flow. Technical success was achieved in 27 (84%) patients in the ST group vs. 21 (75%) patients in the UST group (p=0.52). The combined 30-day death and severe adverse event rate was 19% in the ST group and 29% in the UST group (p=0.54). The 30-day patency rate was 82% in the ST group as compared with 71% in the UST group (p=0.35). Conclusion: Thrombolysis time was significantly reduced by UST as compared with ST in patients with recently thrombosed infrainguinal native arteries or bypass grafts.


Journal of Endovascular Therapy | 2003

Coil embolization of a left pulmonary artery pseudoaneurysm after penetrating injury.

Ingeborg de Jonge; Anco C. Vahl; Victor van der Hulst

Purpose: To report successful coil embolization of a rare traumatic pulmonary artery pseudoaneurysm. Case Report: A 57-year-old man developed a pulmonary artery pseudoaneurysm 14 days after he had been stabbed with a knife in the left lung. The pseudoaneurysm was diagnosed with contrast-enhanced computed tomography and confirmed by pulmonary arteriography. Coils were deployed in the feeding vessels to occlude the defect. Conclusions: Pulmonary artery pseudoaneurysm after penetrating chest injury can be treated by percutaneous catheter embolization, which is less invasive than surgery.


European Journal of Vascular and Endovascular Surgery | 1997

Haemostasis during Infrarenal aortic aneurysm surgery: effect of volume loading and cross-clamping

Anco C. Vahl; Albert J.C Mackaay; Peter C. Huijgens; G.J. Scheffer; Jan A. Rauwerda

OBJECTIVES To study thrombin and plasmin activation during elective abdominal aortic aneurysm surgery. DESIGN Prospective study. SETTING University Hospital. MATERIALS Nine consecutive patients undergoing elective surgery were included. The mean age was 72 years (range 60-79). Blood samples were drawn: (1) before induction of anaesthesia; (2) after induction and Swan Ganz catherisation; (3) just before cross-clamping; (4) before declamping; (5) 8 h postoperatively; (6) 18 h postoperatively. CHIEF OUTCOME MEASURES Assays included: prothrombin time (PT), activated partial thromboplastin time (APTT), fibrinogen, prothrombin fragments (F 1 + 2), anti-thrombin III (ATIII), plasminogen, alpha 2-antiplasmin, haematocrit, platelet and serum protein for correction of haemodilution. Data were expressed as mean (S.D.). Differences between mean values were tested by means of the ANOVA for repeated measures and the Wilcoxon signed rank test. MAIN RESULTS The APTT and TT did not change until heparinisation. The F 1 + 2 were already elevated preoperatively. After correction for haemodilution the AT III and alpha 2-antiplasmin decreased in time (p = 0.009 and 0.0023, respectively) and the F1 + 2 increased (p < 0.0001). Postoperatively (t5 and 6) the values normalised again. CONCLUSIONS The coagulation and fibrinolytic systems are activated during and after elective aortic replacement. Standard tests, like the prothrombin and partial thromboplastin time, are unreliable when assessing the coagulation status of the patient.


Annals of Vascular Surgery | 2013

Systematic Review on Health-Related Quality of Life After Revascularization and Primary Amputation in Patients With Critical Limb Ischemia

Jan Bosma; Anco C. Vahl; Willem Wisselink

BACKGROUND The purpose of this study was to assess the effect of revascularization (bypass surgery, angioplasty) and primary amputation on health-related quality of life (QoL) in patients with critical limb ischemia (CLI; resting pain or tissue loss). METHODS A systematic review of the literature was performed through an electronic search of PubMed (from 1985 to 2012) and Embase (from 1985 to 2012) by two independent investigators to identify English-language articles investigating health-related QoL in regard to CLI. RESULTS Three observational studies were identified describing a comparison between primary amputation and revascularization and their effects on QoL in patients with CLI, all concluding that revascularization should be attempted. Data pooling was omitted due to the impossibility of combining outcome parameters. A separate analysis of each article is presented. CONCLUSIONS Patients with CLI have poor health prospects and life expectancy, irrespective of treatment administered. Randomized trials of health-related QoL after revascularization versus primary amputation are nonexistent. Also, the available observational studies do not allow sound conclusions, due to small numbers and methodologic imperfections. Therefore, no recommendations of either therapy in patients with CLI can be made with respect to an anticipated improvement in QoL.

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Jaap F. Hamming

Leiden University Medical Center

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Peter C. Huijgens

VU University Medical Center

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Ron Balm

University of Amsterdam

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Liffert Vogt

University of Amsterdam

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