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pontage

Pontage is a surgical procedure that creates a bypass to restore blood flow around a blocked or narrowed segment of a vessel. The term is used in vascular and cardiovascular surgery, and in French-language medical literature it often appears in the form of pontage coronarien (coronary bypass) and other site-specific bypasses. The goal is to divert perfusion through a graft conduit that connects proximal and distal healthy vessels, bypassing the occluded segment.

Grafts used for pontage can be autologous channels such as the great saphenous vein or internal mammary

Indications vary by region but commonly include coronary artery disease with significant multivessel ischemia, where bypass

Outcomes depend on the conduit quality, anastomotic technique, and patient comorbidities. Graft patency rates are higher

and
radial
arteries,
or
prosthetic
materials
such
as
expanded
polytetrafluoroethylene
(ePTFE)
or
Dacron.
The
choice
depends
on
the
target
territory,
infection
risk,
prior
surgeries,
and
patient
factors.
Procedures
are
typically
performed
under
open
surgery
and
may
use
cardiopulmonary
bypass
(on-pump)
for
cardiac
bypass
or
be
conducted
off-pump.
Anastomoses
are
usually
end-to-end
or
end-to-side,
depending
on
the
anatomy
and
site
of
the
bypass.
grafting
is
pursued
after
or
alongside
angioplasty;
peripheral
arterial
disease
with
critical
limb
ischemia
or
severe
claudication;
and
selected
cases
of
mesenteric
or
renal
artery
stenosis.
Pontage
aims
to
relieve
symptoms,
improve
tissue
perfusion,
and
reduce
ischemic
risk.
for
arterial
conduits
in
some
sites,
while
prosthetic
grafts
are
more
common
in
others.
Complications
can
include
graft
occlusion,
bleeding,
infection,
thrombosis,
and,
in
cardiac
bypass,
perioperative
myocardial
events
or
stroke.