Literature DB >> 8158079

[Distal arteritis of the legs: endovascular treatment].

J Marzelle1, F Cormier, J M Fichelle, J M Cormier.   

Abstract

Femoro-tibial bypasses are not always feasible in patients presenting with "critical" chronic ischemia. The results of endovascular therapies carried out over a 2-year period are analyzed. Twenty-three patients with critical ischemia (rest pain 13%, gangrene 87%) had 25 procedures on 29 leg arteries: percutaneous transluminal angioplasty in 17 arteries, rotational atherectomy in 10 arteries, laser recanalization (1 artery), directional atherectomy (1 artery). The hospital mortality rate was 4.3%. The cumulative patency and limb salvage rates were respectively 51% and 77% at 6 months, 34% and 71% at 12 months. Candidates for tibial-peroneal endovascular techniques should have a threatened limb, as long as the consequences of failed procedures on patients presenting with claudication can be disastrous, and as long as mid-term patency rates reported in the literature are not fair enough. In localized stenosis or short occlusions with adequate runoff, endovascular techniques are a good alternative to femorotibial bypasses for limb salvage. In diffuse lesions with no possibility of bypass, endovascular techniques can facilitate limb salvage, even if the mid-term arterial patency rate is poor. When conventional therapies cannot face critical ischemia, endovascular therapies can provide a fair limb salvage rate.

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Year:  1994        PMID: 8158079

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Mal Vasc        ISSN: 0398-0499


  1 in total

Review 1.  The Importance of Patency in Patients with Critical Limb Ischemia Undergoing Endovascular Revascularization for Infrapopliteal Arterial Disease.

Authors:  Frederic Baumann; Christoph Ozdoba; Ernst Gröchenig; Nicolas Diehm
Journal:  Front Cardiovasc Med       Date:  2015-01-07
  1 in total

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