| Literature DB >> 2352521 |
H Stiegler1, V Hufen, B Weichenhain, E Standl, H Mehnert.
Abstract
The influence of diabetes on the primary and long-term success rate after 145 local thrombolyses in peripheral arterial disease stages III and IV was evaluated. 75 patients suffered from thrombotic, 62 patients from embolic occlusions, with eight patients suffering from thrombangitis obliterans. Regarding the localisation of vascular occlusion 0.6% suffered under an occlusion of the iliacal artery, 21% of the femoral artery, 16% of the popliteal artery, 7% of the vessel of the lower limb and 55.4% showed a combined occlusion of the femoral- and popliteal artery and the artery of the lower limb. In cases of embolic occlusions only marginal differences could be observed, while the primary success-rate of thrombotic occlusions showed greater differences between both groups (75% vs. 91%). During the follow-up, no differences between both groups could be established (patency-rate of 79% for both groups). The same applies to the prognostic factors: peripheral run off, length, duration of occlusion and the clinical stage (Fontaine IIb to IV). The remarkable differences between diabetic and non-diabetic patients in cases of occlusions of more than 16 cm (66% vs. 88% in primary and 55% vs. 77% in long-term success) can be explained by the high percentage of diabetic patients with poor run-off and microangiopathy. Regarding the above parameters, primary and long-term results seemed to be less in diabetic patients, even though a long-term patency could be observed in 2/3 of diabetic patients in stages IIb and IV with primary success.Entities:
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Year: 1990 PMID: 2352521
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Med Klin (Munich) ISSN: 0723-5003