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patency

Patency refers to the openness or unobstructed state of a hollow organ or vessel, allowing free flow through a lumen. In medicine, patent lumens enable normal passage of blood, air, bile, urine, or gastrointestinal contents. Patency is a key consideration for vessels, ducts, and conduits after surgery or injury, and it may be described as fully or partially patent depending on the adequacy of flow.

Common contexts include arterial and venous vessels, the airway (trachea and bronchi), the biliary tract, the

Loss of patency can result from thrombosis, embolism, atherosclerosis, stenosis, tumor compression, external compression, scar tissue,

In vascular interventions, patency concepts include primary patency (time from treatment to first occlusion), assisted primary

Patency is a dynamic condition influenced by patient factors, device choice, and mechanical forces, and it is

urinary
tract,
and
the
gastrointestinal
tract.
A
lumen
is
considered
patent
if
flow
is
sufficient
for
its
function;
occlusion
can
be
partial
or
complete
and
may
compromise
organ
performance.
edema,
inflammation,
or
kinking
of
a
conduit
such
as
a
graft
or
stent.
Assessments
use
imaging
and
functional
tests,
including
Doppler
ultrasound,
CT
or
MR
angiography,
conventional
angiography,
endoscopy,
and
intraluminal
measurements
of
flow
or
pressure.
patency
(reinterventions
to
maintain
patency
before
occlusion),
and
secondary
patency
(patency
restored
after
occlusion).
Restoring
patency
may
involve
thrombolysis
or
thrombectomy,
angioplasty,
stent
placement,
bypass
surgery,
or
surgical
revision.
Similar
strategies
apply
in
nonvascular
ducts
and
airways,
such
as
dilation,
stenting,
or
removal
of
obstructive
material.
often
reported
as
patency
rates
in
clinical
studies.