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Featured researches published by Juergen Zanow.


Journal of Vascular Surgery | 2008

Experimental study of hemodynamics in procedures to treat access-related ischemia

Juergen Zanow; Ulf Krueger; Peer Reddemann; Hans Scholz

OBJECTIVE This experimental study investigated the hemodynamic effect of corrective procedures for arteriovenous access-related ischemia in pulsatile flow. METHODS Silicone models of an emulated tapered and bifurcated arterial tree of the upper arm and forearm were integrated into a pulsatile flow circuit. The model allowed the study of hemodynamics of simulated arteriovenous fistulas, including collateral circulation, as well as the study of different simulated procedures to improve distal hypoperfusion. Flow rates and arterial pressure were measured simultaneously during simulation of corrective procedures and correlated to hemodynamic values of uncorrected ischemia. RESULTS It was demonstrated that the more proximally localized an arteriovenous anastomosis is, the higher the distal arterial pressure will be at any given fistula flow. Reduction of the fistula flow resulted in a significant improvement of distal perfusion. Ligation of the artery distal to the arteriovenous fistula to prevent retrograde flow increased the distal perfusion only slightly in simulated ischemia. In contrast, the simulated corrective procedures of distal revascularization interval ligation and proximalization of arterial inflow resulted in a significant improvement. The most significant improvement of distal perfusion was observed with the simulated proximalization technique, whereas the effect of distal revascularization technique was less pronounced at higher fistula flow. Arterial ligation after distal revascularization increased the distal pressure only by 10%. CONCLUSION A more centrally localized arteriovenous anastomosis and a reduction of fistula flow significantly increase distal perfusion. The procedure of proximalization of arterial inflow is at least equivalent to the distal revascularization interval ligation technique for the correction of distal ischemia, but does not sacrifice a patent axial artery. The moderate effect of interval ligation of the latter technique should be evaluated by further intraoperative measurements.


Annals of Vascular Surgery | 2010

Treatment of Perigraft Seroma in Expanded Polytetrafluoroethylene Grafts by Sequential Fibrin Sealing of the Outer Graft Surface

Juergen Zanow; Ulf Kruger; Utz Settmacher; Hans Scholz

BACKGROUND The recommended standard for treatment of perigraft seroma (PS) is the graft removal and the reconstruction using an alternative prosthesis. We assumed that a fibrin sealing of the outer surface of expanded polytetrafluoroethylene (ePTFE) grafts would prevent leakage and used this technique in the treatment and prevention of PS. METHODS Over a 10-year period, 24 patients were treated for PS after subcutaneous implantation of ePTFE grafts (14 arterial bypasses and 10 arteriovenous grafts). Affected graft segments were temporarily removed and underwent sequential fibrin sealing technique before reimplantation. In addition, an in vitro experiment was carried out to demonstrate the efficacy of fibrin sealing to prevent leakage through the ePTFE graft wall, after its hydrophobic barrier was destroyed by filling with saline solution under pressure. RESULTS A cure of PS was observed in 20 patients (84%) at a follow-up period of 37 ± 18 months. A later graft infection was not seen in any patient. The patency rate of reconstructed grafts appears to be unaffected. In the performed experiment we have demonstrated an elimination of leakage through the graft wall by the fibrin sealing technique. CONCLUSIONS Sequential fibrin sealing of the outer surface is an effective way to treat PS in ePTFE grafts. However, failure of this treatment cannot be precluded. Further studies are necessary that may provide further insights into the causes and best treatment of PS and the possibly important role of PS in the aneurysm enlargement after complete endovascular exclusion with ePTFE endografts.


International Journal of Angiology | 2000

Comparison of Two Different Arteriovenous Anastomotic Forms By Numerical 3D Simulation of Blood Flow.

Ulf Krueger; Juergen Zanow; Hans Scholz

Anastomotic intimal hyperplasia caused by unphysiological hemodynamics is generally accepted as a reason for dialysis access graft occlusion. Optimizing the venous anastomosis can improve the patency rate of arteriovenous grafts. The purpose of this study was to examine, evaluate and characterize the local hemodynamics, and in particular, wall shear stresses in conventional venous end-to-side anastomosis and in patch form anastomosis (VenafloTM) by Computational Fluid Dynamics (CFD). The flow simulations were carried out as three-dimensional to extend results of our previous 2D studies. The numerical simulation was done with a finite volume-based algorithm. The anastomotic forms were constructed with usual size and fixed walls. Subdividing the flow domain into multiple control volumes solved the fundamental equations. The boundary conditions were constant for both forms. The velocity profile of the patch form is better than for the conventional form. The region of high static pressure caused on flow stagnation is reduced on the vein floor. The anastomotic wall shear stress is decreased. The results of this study strongly support patch form use to reduce the incidence of intimal hyperplasia and venous anastomotic stenoses.


Journal of Vascular Surgery | 2012

Unusual course of an abdominal aortic aneurysm in a patient treated with chemotherapy for gastric cancer

Juergen Zanow; Yvonne Leistner; Stephan Ludewig; Falk Rauchfuss; Utz Settmacher

Most aortic aneurysms have a degenerative genesis and show a slow expansion over years. Only a few patients with a rapid progression of mycotic or inflammatory aneurysm during some weeks or months have been reported. We report a patient with a rapidly growing symptomatic infrarenal aneurysm with a maximal diameter of 53 mm, which developed over a 5-month period from a normal aorta and did not feature typical signs of degenerative, inflammatory, or mycotic aneurysm. The aneurysm was successfully treated by endovascular repair. A complete shrinking of the aneurysm sac was demonstrated during a few weeks postoperatively. Because the patient received chemotherapy with docetaxel, cisplatin, and 5-fluorouracil for metastatic gastric carcinoma 1 year before the aneurysm occurred, we postulate that chemotherapy induced a rapid expansion of the aorta in this patient.


Annals of Vascular Surgery | 2017

Hybrid Procedure with Debranching from the Descending Aorta for Aortic Arch Aneurysm after Previous Open Repair

Juergen Zanow; Martin Breuer; Eric Lopatta; Christoph Schelenz; Utz Settmacher

Aortic arch aneurysms can be treated with hybrid procedures by endovascular exclusion and prior debranching of supra-aortic arteries. We report on a case of symptomatic arch aneurysm following previous supracoronary ascending aorta and hemiarch replacement with a very short proximal landing zone. A successful reconstruction was performed by retrograde revascularization of supra-aortic vessels from the descending aorta and subsequent endovascular repair deploying a proximal stent graft directly above the sinotubular junction with good results in the 4-year follow-up. Retrograde supra-aortic debranching may constitute a suitable approach for hybrid endovascular repair of aneurysms of the aortic arch and the ascending aorta in selected cases.


Journal of Vascular Surgery | 2006

Flow reduction in high-flow arteriovenous access using intraoperative flow monitoring

Juergen Zanow; Karen Petzold; Michael Petzold; Ulf Krueger; Hans Scholz


Artificial Organs | 2002

Computational Fluid Dynamics and Vascular Access

Ulf Krueger; Juergen Zanow; Hans Scholz


Journal of Vascular Surgery | 2005

Arterioarterial prosthetic loop: A new approach for hemodialysis access

Juergen Zanow; Ulf Kruger; Michael Petzold; Karen Petzold; Helga Miller; Hans Scholz


Journal of Vascular Surgery | 2016

Autonomic outcome is better after endarterectomy than after stenting in patients with asymptomatic carotid stenosis

Sven Rupprecht; Sigrid Finn; Jens Ehrhardt; Dirk Hoyer; Thomas Mayer; Juergen Zanow; Albrecht Guenther; Matthias Schwab


Gefasschirurgie | 2007

Das arterioarterielle Interponat für die Hämodialyse

Hans Scholz; Karen Petzold; M. Petzold; Juergen Zanow; H. Miller; Ulf Kruger

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Hans Scholz

Humboldt University of Berlin

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Ulf Kruger

Humboldt University of Berlin

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