An artery or vein or a graft that has been used to replace an artery or vein can get infected by bacteria, viruses or fungus. The infection flows through your bloodstream, and may cause you to become very sick with fevers, chills and weight loss. The infection could occur within months of the replacement procedure or many years later.
Your own arteries and veins very rarely get infected. However, a graft or stent-graft is a foreign body and is susceptible to infection; it happens in approximately 1-2 cases out of every 100.
Antibiotics are used but often are not sufficient to clear the infection. In most cases, the artery, vein or graft needs to be removed. If infected grafts are not removed, many of them will slowly decay and can break open, bleed excessively and potentially cause loss of a limb, or even death.
If you have a fever, chills, or notice cloudy drainage from an incision after a graft is placed, get immediate help. Be alert for other symptoms listed below.
You may have no symptoms.
You may have a fever, chills, night sweats, pain, muscle pain.
You may notice cloudy or foul-smelling fluid draining from an old incision.
You may notice blue spots on your feet.
Usually, vascular infections occur when a graft or stent-graft is placed and Staphyloccocus bacteria from the skin contaminates the graft during the procedure.
Any infection that can enter the bloodstream - such as a sever urinary tract infection, infection in your heart valves or severe food poisoning - could stick to the plastic graft and infect it.
If you have a fever, chills, or cloudy drainage from an incision, no matter its age, get immediate help. Be alert for other symptoms listed above.
ANTIBIOTICS are an important first step in treating vascular infections. Ideally, before you start the medicine, a sample of the fluid or tissue involved in the infection will be analyzed to help identify the type of infection you have, and make it easier to pick the best antibiotic treatment.
SURGERY is usually recommended and scheduled for the near future. The infected graft, artery or vein is removed and replaced with another graft soaked in antibiotics, or with a section of one of your own veins, or with a cadaver vein. If the affected artery or graft is blocked and you don’t need it, the infected graft can be removed without being replaced.
EMERGENCY SURGERY is rare, but sometimes needed. For example, if you are very sick, the infection has caused sepsis, or you are bleeding from the graft, emergency surgery is necessary to control the infection and take lifesaving measures.
To help prevent vascular infections: