Treatment for atherosclerotic vascular disease in human beings ranges from medical management to interventional therapy, such as angioplasty, atherectomy, and bypass grafting. Recently, bypass grafting with a vascular prosthesis has received increased attention and clinical use. In the course of studies to optimize use of a small-caliber vascular prosthesis, five of six rabbits undergoing implantation of a polytetrafluoroethylene vascular prosthesis in the infrarenal abdominal aorta developed hind limb neurologic deficits, which resulted from focal ischemic damage to the spinal cord attributable to temporary vascular occlusion of the abdominal aorta during placement of the vascular prosthesis. In subsequent studies, induction of systemic hypothermia decreased the rate of development of neurologic deficits from 83 to 9% without any apparent perioperative complications associated with decreased body temperature. We determined that mild hypothermia (rectal temperature of 32 to 35 degrees C), combined with aortic occlusion time of < 40 min, is sufficient to afford protection from ischemic injury to the spinal cord in the rabbit.