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Common Femoral Artery (CFA) Disease

1 Podcast on BackTable

Hear how experienced physicians manage Common Femoral Artery (CFA) Disease on BackTable. Learn from podcasts, cases, and courses curated by physician content creators, covering diagnosis, clinical decision-making, and treatments. Get the BackTable app to follow this Topic and hear more of the conversations that matter to your practice.

Surgical vs. Endovascular Management of CFA Disease
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BackTable Vascular & Interventional

Episode # 181  •  24 Jan 2022

Surgical vs. Endovascular Management of CFA Disease

Vascular Surgeon Dr. Mazin Foteh and our host Dr. Sabeen Dhand consider various factors that can influence the choice of treatment methods for calcified common femoral artery (CFA) disease, including discussing the pros and cons of an endovascular vs surgical approach.

This podcast is supported by

Shockwave Medical

More on Common Femoral Artery (CFA) Disease

VI

VI Episode #181

Jan 24, 2022

with Dr. Mazin Foteh, Dr. Sabeen Dhand

Surgical vs. Endovascular Management of CFA Disease

Vascular Surgeon Dr. Mazin Foteh and our host Dr. Sabeen Dhand consider various factors that can influence the choice...

3,300+ listens

Dr. Foteh is a paid consultant for Shockwave Medical and opinions expressed are those of the speaker and not necessarily those of Shockwave Medical.

In the United States: Rx only.

Indications for Use—The Shockwave Medical Intravascular Lithotripsy (IVL) System is intended for lithotripsy-enhanced balloon dilatation of lesions, including calcified lesions, in the peripheral vasculature, including the iliac, femoral, ilio-femoral, popliteal, infra-popliteal, and renal arteries. Not for use in the coronary, carotid or cerebral vasculature.

Contraindications—Do not use if unable to pass 0.014″ (M5, M5+, S4, E8) or 0.018″ (L6) guidewire across the lesion-Not intended for treatment of in-stent restenosis or in coronary, carotid, or cerebrovascular arteries.

Warnings—Only to be used by physicians who are familiar with interventional vascular procedures—Physicians must be trained prior to use of the device—Use the generator in accordance with recommended settings as stated in the Operator’s Manual.

Precautions—use only the recommended balloon inflation medium—Appropriate anticoagulant therapy should be administered by the physician—Decision regarding use of distal protection should be made based on physician assessment of treatment lesion morphology.

Adverse effects–Possible adverse effects consistent with standard angioplasty include–Access site complications–Allergy to contrast or blood thinner–Arterial bypass surgery—Bleeding complications—Death—Fracture of guidewire or device—Hypertension/Hypotension—Infection/sepsis—Placement of a stent—renal failure—Shock/pulmonary edema—target vessel stenosis or occlusion—Vascular complications. Risks unique to the device and its use—Allergy to catheter material(s)— Device malfunction or failure—Excess heat at target site.

Prior to use, please reference the Instructions for Use for more information on indications, contraindications, warnings, precautions and adverse events. www.shockwavemedical.com/ifu

Please contact your local Shockwave representative for specific country availability.

The Materials available on BackTable are provided for informational and educational purposes only and are not a substitute for the independent professional judgment of a qualified healthcare professional in diagnosing or treating patients. Any opinions, statements, or views expressed are those of the individual contributors and do not necessarily reflect those of the publisher, platform, or any affiliated organization.

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