| Literature DB >> 30706755 |
Ehrin J Armstrong1, Syed Alam2, Steve Henao3, Arthur C Lee4, Brian G DeRubertis5, Miguel Montero-Baker6, Carlos Mena7, Bennett Cua8, Luis Mariano Palena9, Richard Kovach10, Venita Chandra11, Amjad AlMahameed12, Craig M Walker13.
Abstract
Critical limb ischemia (CLI), defined as ischemic rest pain or nonhealing ulceration due to arterial insufficiency, represents the most severe and limb-threatening manifestation of peripheral artery disease. A major challenge in the optimal treatment of CLI is that multiple specialties participate in the care of this complex patient population. As a result, the care of patients with CLI is often fragmented, and multidisciplinary societal guidelines have not focused specifically on the care of patients with CLI. Furthermore, multidisciplinary care has the potential to improve patient outcomes, as no single medical specialty addresses all the facets of care necessary to reduce cardiovascular and limb-related morbidity in this complex patient population. This review identifies current gaps in the multidisciplinary care of patients with CLI, with a goal toward increasing disease recognition and timely referral, defining important components of CLI treatment teams, establishing options for revascularization strategies, and identifying best practices for wound care post-revascularization.Entities:
Keywords: critical limb ischemia; endovascular therapy; multidisciplinary care; peripheral artery disease; revascularization; wound care
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 30706755 DOI: 10.1177/1526602819826593
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Endovasc Ther ISSN: 1526-6028 Impact factor: 3.487