Aim: To examine the influence of diabetes mellitus (DM) on the outcome of infrainguinal bypass operations performed for critical foot ischaemia in Chinese patients.
Methods: A prospective audit of 265 consecutive infrainguinal bypass operations.
Results: Diabetic patients suffered more frequently from ischaemic heart disease (48% vs 25%, P=0.001) and tissue loss (90% vs 79%, P=0.01) at presentation. Cigarette smoking was more prevalent in the non-diabetic (NDM) group (72% vs 51%, P=0.001). Arterial segments distal to the common femoral artery were more often used as inflow to bypass graft in DM patients (36% vs 22%, P=0.02). Operative mortality (seven DM vs one NDM, P=0.19). Early graft failure (7% in DM group vs 10% in NDM group, P=0.24), wound infection rate (24% in DM group vs 17% in NDM group, P=0.21), early limb loss (9% in DM group vs 6% in NDM group, P=0.66) were comparable. However, hospital mortality was higher in DM patients (8% vs 1%, P=0.04). DM patients more frequently required further surgical debridement postoperatively (20% vs 9%, P=0.04). Long-term, patient survival was inferior in the DM group (43% NDM vs 33% DM at 5 years, P=0.03). Primary graft patency (46% DM vs 34% NDM at 4 years P=0.19), secondary graft patency (57% DM vs 47% NDM at 4 years P=0.14) and limb salvage rate (78% vs 81% at 5 years, P=0.79) were comparable.
Conclusion: Diabetes mellitus adversely affects hospital mortality and long-term survival. Graft patency and limb salvage are not compromised by the presence of DM.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1046/j.1445-2197.2004.02915.x | DOI Listing |
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