Mohamed sharkawy

Professor
  • Country: EG

Activities

Comment on Jan 19, 2020

Mohamed Elfarok replied to your comment on presentation Spontaneous Rupture of SFA.

»Thank you for a great comment 1- the diameter of this patient SFA was 8 mm, i thought 10 mm will do ok , did not want to use any bigger diameter because this is a friable artery 2- there is no need to evacuate the haematoma unless it becomes infected or cause complication, it has resolved after 2 months«
Comment on Jan 17, 2020

Amr Abdelghaffar commented on presentation Spontaneous Rupture of SFA.

»Thank you so much dear Prof. Alfarouk , I have 2 questions : 1) Wallstent covered stent is 10 / 10 , Do you think it's perfect for SFA as regard sizing 2) Did you needed to evacuate hematoma and make open surgery ? Thanks«
Comment on Jan 17, 2020

Amr Abdelghaffar commented on presentation Spontaneous Rupture of SFA.

»Thank you so much dear Prof. Alfarouk , I have 2 questions : 1) Wallstent covered stent is 10 * 10 , Do you think it's perfect for SFA as regard sizing 2) Did you needed to evacuate hematoma and make open surgery ? Thanks«
Comment on Dec 20, 2019

Basma Algettawi commented on presentation Spontaneous Rupture of SFA.

»Great job Prof. Thank you so much for this sharing. I am really apperciate that and waiting for the next.«
Comment on Dec 19, 2019

Mohamed Elfarok replied to your comment on presentation Spontaneous Rupture of SFA.

»Dearest Prof Sharkawey , thank you very much for your comment, actually this patient is a grandfather of a cardiologist and he had duplex scan arterial left leg before this event and there was no aneurysm found just diffuse atherosclerosis, so it is really spontaneous rupture of SFA which is very rare event only 5 cases reported in literature whorld wide , as we get older our arteries rupture due to wall weakness without aneurysmal formation, and also if you notice this is SFA zone two middle zone which is very rare to develop aneurysm it is usually in zone 1, and thank you again for your comment«
Comment on Dec 19, 2019

Mohamed sharkawy commented on presentation Spontaneous Rupture of SFA.

»Dear Professor Omar, very nice case. May I suggest that the diagnosis is ruptured SFA aneurysm from the start. and the concomitant DVT was created by the pressure of the adjacent aneurysm ! You did the best cover to the leaking area, but I would take care more to the Proximal end (feeding) cover than the distal one. Thank you, I appreciate much your really great way to spread knowledge, learn and benefit everybody including myself.«
Comment on Dec 19, 2019

Mohamed Elfarok commented on presentation Spontaneous Rupture of SFA.

»Dearest Prof Bisdas , 1- the use of the two needles with to mark the proximal and distal part of the ruptured segment in the SFA, so I need to cover the distance between these two needles and 2 cm proximal and distal landing zones 2- I totally agree it can be rupture of mycotic aneurysm of this patient although it can also be spontaneous rupture of SFA without previous aneurysmal dialatation , there was no eivdece of previous aneurysm in the patient SFA . very very rare case thank you very much my dearest Prof Bisdas«
Comment on Dec 19, 2019

Mohamed Elfarok replied to your comment on presentation Spontaneous Rupture of SFA.

»Dearest Prof Bisdas , 1- the use of the two needles with to mark the proximal and distal part of the ruptured segment in the SFA, so I need to cover the distance between these two needles and 2 cm proximal and distal landing zones 2- I totally agree it can be rupture of mycotic aneurysm of this patient although it can also be spontaneous rupture of SFA without previous aneurysmal dialatation , there was no eivdece of previous aneurysm in the patient SFA . very very rare case thank you very much my dearest Prof Bisdas«
Comment on Dec 17, 2019

Theodosios Bisdas commented on presentation Spontaneous Rupture of SFA.

»Mohammed amazing case. Why did you use the two needles? I did not understand it very well. Second what about the pathology behind this aneurysm? Could it be mycotic?«