This study evaluates the critical points in the management of 48 patients with injured arteries of the lower limb between 1980 and 1986. 77% of the traumas were resultant from blunt vehicular traffic mishaps. 13 patients were treated within 6 h, 8 patients later than 6 h, 21 patients later than 24 h post injury. Delays in diagnosis occurred due to lack of or no indication for vascular trauma. Careful physical examination and aggressive use of angiography is essential in improving limb salvage rates, while doppler investigation may lead to improper diagnosis. Overall limb salvage was 69%, however, no reconstruction was possible in 6 cases (13%). 38 of the 42 arterial reconstructions required interposition of venous bypass grafts, four end to end anastomoses. Eleven patients had associated venous injuries, which in nine cases were repaired. Venous ligation in three cases was attributed with increased complication. In three cases ischemia time was shortened by the use of temporary javid shunts for rapid restoration of arterial flow. 50% of the patients were found to require fasciotomy, either pre- or postvascular repair. Early fasciotomy, however was found to be most beneficial. Fractures were treated in 15 cases with the external fixator, in 21 cases with internal fixation. Delayed revascularization after 24 h combined with aggressive debriding of muscle necrosis and the employment of vascularized muscular and skin flaps resulted in a decline in amputation rates and improved functional results.
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JBJS Case Connect
January 2025
Department of Orthopedic Surgery, Texas Tech University Health Sciences, Center; Lubbock, Texas.
Case: We present a 42-year-old man who developed extensive left lower extremity arterial thrombosis following COVID-19 pneumonia. Despite multiple revascularization attempts and a below-knee amputation, he faced wound necrosis and insufficient soft tissue coverage. An innovative approach using a pedicled flap and sequential flow-through free flaps was used for limb salvage.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: Although revascularization is first-line therapy for chronic limb-threatening ischemia (CLTI), there are no established treatments for patients in whom revascularization is not (or is a poor) option, including CLTI that has responded poorly to revascularization. This study verified the efficacy of the Rheocarna, a novel apheresis device, for no-option CLTI or poor-response CLTI after revascularization.
Methods And Results: This multicenter retrospective observational study analyzed 221 patients (221 limbs) with no- or poor-option CLTI (mean [±SD] age 71±10 years; males, 70.
J Hand Microsurg
January 2025
Department of Orthopaedic Surgery and Musculoskeletal Trauma, University Hospital of Larissa, Larissa, Greece.
Purpose: Severe injury of multiple anatomical structures of the upper extremity can be caused by an extremely violent mechanism during labor and motor vehicle accidents, gunshots and explosions. The mangled upper extremity consists of trauma of at least 3 of 4 tissue types: connective tissue (skin, subcutaneous tissue, tendons, muscles), vessels, nerves, and bones. The purpose of this study is to evaluate the medium and long-term results of the limb salvage management of those injuries in our department.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPlast Surg (Oakv)
February 2025
Queen Victoria Hospital NHS Foundation Trust, East Grinstead, UK.
Tendon grafting is standard for treating tendon defects. Allografts are popular in cruciate ligament reconstruction but not yet in upper limb tendon reconstruction. A scoping review was conducted to map the existing practice of allograft use in hand surgery for tendon reconstruction and identify gaps in knowledge for future research.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFInt Angiol
December 2024
Department of Vascular Surgery, Shebin Elkoom Teaching Hospital, Shebin Elkoom, Egypt.
Background: The peroneal artery is known to give branches to the anterior and posterior tibial arteries. Scattered reports in the literature over the last decade failed to provide solid evidence as to the optimum strategy for below-knee targeted revascularization in limited-option patients with critical limb-treating ischemia (CLTI). We sought to determine the benefit of performing single peroneal tibial artery angioplasty revascularization compared with single non-peroneal angiosome-targeted tibial artery angioplasty revascularization for patients presented with CLTI.
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