Title: Management of Acute Limb Ischemia
1Management of Acute Limb Ischemia
- Steven Hanish, MD
- Thursday Resident Conference
- September 29, 2005
2Outline
- Review of lower extremity arterial anatomy
- Clinical Presentation
- Surgical vs. non-surgical interventions
- Compartment Syndrome
3Anatomy
4Anatomy
5Anatomy
6Anatomy
7Rutherford Classification
Doppler
8Historical Perspective
- Blaisdell, et. al. - 1st study to look at
outcomes of patients with ALI - 52 patients
- 17 thrombectomy
- 4 amputations
- 2 deaths
- 29 Heparin
- 1 death
- 5 amputations
- 6 amputation
- 1 death
- MM 25
9Historical Perspective
- Jivegard, et. al. corroborated prior findings
- 1995
- 234 patients
- 61 treated with heparin at 1 center
- 173 early revascularization at 10 centres
- Gangrene and Death were endpoints
- Findings
- 20 mortality
- Loss of motor function or cyanosis predictive of
gangrene
10ER Consult
- You get a text page from the ER stating - Lady
in 3b has a cold leg and no pulses. - What now?
11ER Consult
- H and P
- Focus on comorbidities
- Tobacco, Diabetes, Afib,
- H/O vascular diseases
- H/O hypercoag. state
12ER Consult
- Physical Exam
- Pain
- Pallor
- Pulselessness
- Paresthesias
- Paralysis
- Poikilothermia
13ER Consult
- 66 yo AA female
- 36 hours of cool, painful RLE
- On coumadin for afib and stopped 10 days ago for
colonoscopy - PMH ESRD, DM, Afib, CHF (30 EF)
- Tob HL
14Case Presentation
- PE
- Irregularly, irregular pulse
- Palp. Femoral pulses, no distal pulses, RLE very
cool - No evidence of tissue necrosis
15Etiology of Arterial Occlusion
- Thrombotic vs. Embolic
- Embolic Sources
- Cardiac 75
- Atrial Fibrillation 51
- Acute MI 24
- Non-Cardiac 10
- Atheromatous Debris 5
- Aneurysmal Origin 5
- Post CV Surgery 7
16Etiology of Arterial Occlusion
- Embolization Sites
- Distal Aorta 16
- Iliac 17
- Common Femoral 44
- Popliteal 15
- Upper Extremity 8
- (Visceral 6 in separate series)
- Outcome
- Perioperative Heparin Fogarty
Thromboembolectomy 10 Mortality and 92 Limb
Salvage - Recurrence
- Threefold Increase Without Anticoagulation (7
vs. 21) -
Mills, Porter, Ann Vasc Surg, 1994
17Case Presentation
Operating Room vs. Interventional Radiology
18TPA vs. Surgery
- 3 randomized, clinical trials
- Rochester series
- STILE trial
- TOPAS trial
19TPA
20Rochester Series
- Ouriel K, Shortell CK, DeWeese JA, et. al. A
comparison of Thrombolytic Therapy with operative
revascularization in the initial treatment of
acute peripheral ischemia. J Vasc Surg 1994 19
1021-1030 - Compared Urokinase to primary operation in 114
patients - Rutherford IIb
- Mean symptoms 48 hours
- Outcome _at_ 12 months
- 84 receiving UK alive vs. 58 in surgery arm
- 80 limb salvage in both groups
- Cardiovascular complications worse outcome
21Surgery or Thrombolysis for the Ischemic Lower
Extremity
- Sponsored by Genetech (Activase)
- 393 patients randomized
- rt-PA
- UK
- Primary operation
- Death and Amputation rates similar in both
groups, though, lysis patients had more frequent
interventions
22Surgery or Thrombolysis for the Ischemic Lower
Extremity
- 30 day outcomes better with surgery (plt0.001)
- Reduction in ongoing/recurrent ischemia
- Stratification by duration of ischemia
- 0-14days, lysis had lower amputation rates
(p0.052) - gt14 days, surgery trended toward lower morbidity
and less recurrent ischemia - 55.8 of lytic patients had a reduction in their
operative plan when referred for surgery
23Surgery or Thrombolysis for the Ischemic Lower
Extremity
- Subgroup analysis
- Native artery vs. graft occlusion
- 10 amputation rate in native artery treated with
lysis vs. 0 treated with surgery, P0.0024 - Amputation rate lower in graft occlusions treated
with lysis vs. surgery, p 0.026 - Conclusion lysis is more beneficial in acute
graft occlusion lt 14 days
24Thrombolysis Or Peripheral Arterial Surgery
- Funded by Abbott Labs - rUK
- 544 patients randomized to rUK vs. primary
surgery - 1 year follow-up
- Amputation free survival equivalent between
groups (68.2 v. 68.8) - 31.5 of lysis patients alive without further
intervention at 6 month f/u ( 26 at 1 yr)
25Thrombolysis Or Peripheral Arterial Surgery
- Predictive factors for amputation-free survival
- White (RR1.75 p0.003)
- Younger age (RR1.015 p0.046)
- CNS disease (RR1.726 p0.006)
- H/O Malignancy (RR1.615 p0.024)
- CHF (RR2.202 plt0.001)
- Low Body Weight (RR1.007/lb p0.006)
- Skin Changes (RR1.585 p0.007)
- Rest pain (RR0.503 p0.003)
- Longer occlusions fare better with lysis (30cm)
26Thrombolysis Or Peripheral Arterial Surgery
- Cost analysis Operative intervention for ALI
extended life and was less costly than lysis - Life expectancy 5.04 vs. 4.75 yrs
- Lifetime cost 57,429 vs. 76, 326
27Thrombolysis Or Peripheral Arterial Surgery
- Thrombolysis becomes cost effective if
- 1 yr mortality drops from 20 to 10.7
- Amputation rate falls from 15 to 3.9
- 1 yr cost drops below 13,000 (49,000 now)
- Conclusion Surgery provides most cost effective
utilization of resources
28Lysis vs. Surgery
29Case Presentation
- To OR
- Arteriogram showed no profunda flow and popliteal
occlusion - Fogarty thromboembolectomy of CFA, PFA, SFA,
popliteal, peroneal - Foot warm at completion of case
? Fasciotomy
30Compartment Syndrome
- increased pressure within a limited space
compromises the circulation and function of the
tissues within that space - Matsen, 1980 - First described by Malgaigne and first medical
reference by Volkmann, 1881
31Compartment Syndrome
- Orthopedic, vascular, soft tissue and iatrogenic
- Vascular - 0 -21 incidence
- Incidence rises to 50 in patients with both
popliteal and venous injuries
32Compartment Syndrome
- Increased pressure within a fascial compartment
- Edema, blood
- Decreased capillary perfusion
- Peripheral Nerves at risk, Sensorimotor deficit
on exam - Loss of sensation to light touch as first sign
- Web space between Great Toe and Second Toe
- Sensory portion of Deep Peroneal N.
- Infrageniculate Compartments
- Anterior Anatomy dictates vulnerability
- Lateral Affected in conjunction with Anterior
- Deep posterior and Superficial posterior
33Etiology
- Normal pressure 10-12 mmHg
- Compartment Perfusion Pressure CPPMAP - Comp.
pressure - Critical pressure 30-50 mmHg
- More accurate measure is
- Delta p diastolic pressure - Comp. press
34Treatment
- Recommended in patients with delta p lt 30 and/or
clinical signs - Prophylatic in patients with vascular injuries
with warm ischemia gt4-6 hrs, ligation of major
veins or crush injuries
35Fasciotomy
36Case Presentation
- POD 1 Right calf was tense
- Compartment pressure 22mm Hg
- No sensory deficit
- Discharged home on coumadin on POD 8
37Summary
- Acute arterial occlusion is associated with high
morbidity and mortality - Embolic and Thrombotic sources
- Emergent intervention is necessary
- Surgery vs. TPA
- Be aware of compartment pressures