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Tibial Angioplasty as an Alternative Strategy in Patients with Limb-Threatening Ischemia
Authors:Daniel G. Clair MD  Rajeev Dayal MD  Peter L. Faries MD  Joshua Bernheim MD  Roman Nowygrod MD  John C. Lantis II MD  Frederick P. Beavers MD  K. Craig Kent MD
Affiliation:(1) Division of Vascular Surgery, New York–Presbyterian Hospital, Columbia College of Physicians and Surgeons and The Weill Cornell Medical School, New York, NY, USA
Abstract:
The purpose of this study was to assess the technical feasibility and early outcome of tibial angioplasty for a subset of patients with limb-threatening ischemia who were not candidates for bypass grafting. A retrospective analysis was conducted of 19 patients (7 male, 12 female) who underwent crural angioplasty for limb-threatening ischemia using 0.018- or 0.014 inch-based systems. Contraindications to bypass were insufficient conduit in 7 patients and severe comorbid illness in 12. Concurrent treatment of inflow lesions was performed in 12 of 20 limbs via either angioplasty alone (5) or combined with stenting (12). Outcome measures were anklebrachial indices (ABI), relief of rest pain, and healing or healed wounds. Twenty-three vessels were treated, including 14 tibial occlusions and 9 stenoses. The average length of diseased segment was 11 cm (range, 3-25 cm). Thirteen of 14 occlusions were treated with subintimal recanalization, the remainder with laser recanalization. Technical success was achieved in 22 of 23 treated vessels. Mean preoperative ABI was 0.53 and mean postoperative ABI was 0.85. Palpable pulses were present in 11 of 20 limbs (55%). There was one perioperative mortality (5.2%). Mean follow-up was 3 months. Three failures occurred requiring amputation (15.8%). The remaining 16 patients were improved with healing (8) or healed (4) wounds and relief of rest pain (4). These results indicate that technical success may be achieved with outflow lesion angioplasty in the majority of patients encountered. The durability of this method of therapy is unknown, and our length of follow-up is not sufficient to answer this question. However, an attempt at angioplasty appears justified before primary amputation and before surgical bypass in those patients at high risk for intervention.Presented at the 17th Annual Meeting of the Eastern Vascular Society, New York, NY, May 1-5, 2003.
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