McCarthy W J, Matsumura J S, Fine N A, Dumanian G A, Pearce W H
Department of Surgery, Section of Vascular Surgery, Northwestern University Medical School, Rush-Presbyterian St. Luke's Medical Center, Chicago, IL 60612-3833, USA.
J Vasc Surg. 1999 May;29(5):814-8; discussion 818-20. doi: 10.1016/s0741-5214(99)70208-9.
Lower-extremity arterial anatomy that is insufficient for successful vein bypass grafting and major proximal foot wounds often lead to leg amputation in patients with severe ischemia. Free tissue transfer, which can provide limb salvage in these patients after arterial reconstruction, was studied.
During a 45-month period, 21 patients who otherwise would have undergone leg amputation were treated with arterial bypass by means of vein grafting and free tissue transfer. Ages of the patients ranged from 40 to 73 years (average, 59 years); 18 of the 21 patients had diabetes mellitus; and all patients except one were men. Arterial reconstruction was performed from the femoral (nine of 21 patients) or popliteal artery (12 of 21 patients) to the posterior tibial (eight patients), dorsalis pedis (five patients), peroneal (three patients), popliteal (one patient), or anterior tibial artery (one patient), or directly to the free flap (three patients). The tissue transferred included latissimus dorsi (five patients), rectus abdominus (five patients), omentum (five patients), gracilis (two patients), radial forearm flaps (three patients), and a scapular flap (one patient). Foot defects were debrided, including the appropriate toe or transmetatarsal amputation, covered with the transferred flap, and then split-thickness skin grafted. Arterial flow for all flaps was through the vein grafts, with direct arterial anastomosis and with venous outflow through adjacent tibial veins.
All 21 procedures were successful initially, without operative mortality, but three failed within 4 weeks because of uncontrolled infection (two) or embolization from a remote site (one) and required below-knee amputation. Grafts remained patent in 18 procedures, and follow-up of this cohort ranged from 1 to 45 months (mean, 13.3 months). Two patients died, one after 4 months and one after 6 months, of unrelated illness; at the time of death, they had functioning grafts. The remaining 19 patients are alive. Of these, 15 have patent arterial grafts, all viable free flaps. Thus, limb salvage was accomplished in 18 of 21 (86%) patients who otherwise would have required below-knee amputation.
Patients destined for leg amputation despite aggressive traditional arterial bypass grafting methods can achieve limb salvage with the additional technique of free tissue transfer.
下肢动脉解剖结构不利于成功进行静脉搭桥移植,且足部近端严重创伤常导致严重缺血患者截肢。本研究探讨了可在动脉重建后为这些患者挽救肢体的游离组织移植术。
在45个月期间,对21例原本需行截肢术的患者采用静脉移植和游离组织移植进行动脉搭桥治疗。患者年龄40至73岁(平均59岁);21例患者中有18例患有糖尿病;除1例患者外均为男性。动脉重建从股动脉(21例患者中的9例)或腘动脉(21例患者中的12例)至胫后动脉(8例)、足背动脉(5例)、腓动脉(3例)、腘动脉(1例)或胫前动脉(1例),或直接至游离皮瓣(3例)。移植的组织包括背阔肌(5例)、腹直肌(5例)、大网膜(5例)、股薄肌(2例)、桡侧前臂皮瓣(3例)和肩胛皮瓣(1例)。足部缺损进行清创,包括适当的截趾或经跖骨截肢,用移植皮瓣覆盖,然后进行断层皮片移植。所有皮瓣的动脉血流通过静脉移植,直接进行动脉吻合,静脉回流通过相邻的胫静脉。
所有21例手术最初均成功,无手术死亡,但3例在4周内失败,原因是感染无法控制(2例)或远处部位栓塞(1例),需要行膝下截肢。18例手术中移植血管保持通畅,该队列的随访时间为1至45个月(平均13.3个月)。2例患者死亡,1例在4个月后,1例在6个月后,死于无关疾病;死亡时,他们的移植血管功能良好。其余19例患者存活。其中,15例患者的动脉移植血管通畅,所有游离皮瓣均存活。因此,21例原本需要行膝下截肢的患者中有18例(86%)实现了肢体挽救。
尽管采用积极的传统动脉搭桥移植方法仍注定要行截肢术的患者,可通过游离组织移植这一额外技术实现肢体挽救。