| Literature DB >> 31416204 |
Dan-Mircea Olinic1,2, Agata Stanek3, Dan-Alexandru Tătaru4,5, Călin Homorodean1,2, Maria Olinic1,2.
Abstract
This review presents an update on the diagnosis and management of acute limb ischemia (ALI), a severe condition associated with high mortality and amputation rates. A comprehensive spectrum of ALI etiology is presented, with highlights on embolism and in situ thrombosis. The steps for emergency diagnosis are described, emphasizing the role of clinical data and imaging, mainly duplex ultrasound, CT angiography and digital substraction angiography. The different therapeutic techniques are presented, ranging from pharmacological (thrombolysis) to interventional (thromboaspiration, mechanical thrombectomy, and stent implantation) techniques to established surgical revascularization (Fogarty thrombembolectomy, by-pass, endarterectomy, patch angioplasty or combinations) and minor or major amputation of necessity. Postprocedural management, reperfusion injury, compartment syndrome and long-term treatment are also updated.Entities:
Keywords: acute limb ischemia; diagnosis; duplex ultrasound; endovascular; mechanical thrombectomy; surgical revascularization; thromboaspiration; thrombolysis
Year: 2019 PMID: 31416204 PMCID: PMC6723825 DOI: 10.3390/jcm8081215
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Clin Med ISSN: 2077-0383 Impact factor: 4.241
Stages of acute limb ischemia (ALI) according to the Rutherford classification [14].
| Stage | Prognosis | Findings | Doppler Signal | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Sensory Loss | Muscle Weakness | Arterial | Venous | ||
| I | Limb viable, not immediately threatened | None | None | Audible | Audible |
| IIa | Limb marginally threatened, salvageable if promptly treated | Minimal (toes) | None | Often inaudible | Audible |
| IIb | Limb immediately threatened, salvageable with immediate revascularization | More than toes, pain at rest | Mild or moderate | Inaudible | Audible |
| III | Limb irreversibly damaged, major tissue loss or permanent nerve damage inevitable | Profound, anesthetic | Paralysis (rigor) | Inaudible | Inaudible |
Absolute and relative contraindications to catheter-directed thrombolysis (CDT) (modified after [29]).
|
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| Active bleeding |
| Intracranial hemorrhage |
| Presence or development of compartment syndrome |
| Severe limb ischemia, requiring immediate operative intervention |
| For streptokinase: prior administration of streptokinase |
|
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| Uncontrolled hypertension > 180/110 mmHg |
| Puncture of non-compressible vessel |
| Intracranial tumor |
| Ischemic cerebrovascular event < 2 months |
| Neurosurgery or head trauma within past 3 months |
| Gastrointestinal bleeding < 10 days |
| Hepatic failure, particularly in cases with coagulopathy |
| Pregnancy/postpartum status |
| Bacterial endocarditis |
| History of severe contrast allergy or hypersensitivity |
Intra-arterial thrombolytic therapy and approved regimens in ALI.
| Thrombolytic | Doses and Regimen | Comments |
|---|---|---|
| Streptokinase | 50.000–120.000 IU over 4 h, followed by 1000–8000 IU/h | UFH 600 IU/h [ |
| Urokinase | 4000 IU/min or 250.000 IU bolus, followed by 4000 IU/h for 4 h, then 2000 IU/h (max 36 h) | UFH 600 IU/h [ |
| Alteplase | 1–2 mg bolus, followed by 0.05 mg/kg/h | UFH 10.000 IU/24 h [ |