Pecoraro R E, Reiber G E, Burgess E M
Department of Medicine, University of Washington School of Medicine, Seattle.
Diabetes Care. 1990 May;13(5):513-21. doi: 10.2337/diacare.13.5.513.
We defined the causal pathways responsible for 80 consecutive initial lower-extremity amputations to an extremity in diabetic patients at the Seattle Veterans Affairs Medical Center over a 30-mo interval from 1984 to 1987. Causal pathways, either unitary or composed of various combinations of seven potential causes (i.e., ischemia, infection, neuropathy, faulty wound healing, minor trauma, cutaneous ulceration, gangrene), were determined empirically after a synthesis by the investigators of various objective and subjective data. Estimates of the proportion of amputations that could be ascribed to each component cause were calculated. Twenty-three unique causal pathways to diabetic limb amputation were identified. Eight frequent constellations of component causes resulted in 73% of the amputations. Most pathways were composed of multiple causes, with only critical ischemia from acute arterial occlusions responsible for amputations as a singular cause. The causal sequence of minor trauma, cutaneous ulceration, and wound-healing failure applied to 72% of the amputations, often with the additional association of infection and gangrene. We specified precise criteria in the definition of causal pathway to permit estimation of the cumulative proportion of amputations due to various causes. Forty-six percent of the amputations were attributed to ischemia, 59% to infection, 61% to neuropathy, 81% to faulty wound healing, 84% to ulceration, 55% to gangrene, and 81% to initial minor trauma. An identifiable and potentially preventable pivotal event, in most cases an episode involving minor trauma that caused cutaneous injury, preceded 69 to 80 amputations. Defining causal pathways that predispose to diabetic limb amputation suggests practical interventions that may be effective in preventing diabetic limb loss.
我们确定了在1984年至1987年的30个月期间,西雅图退伍军人事务医疗中心连续80例糖尿病患者首次下肢截肢至某一肢体的因果路径。因果路径可以是单一的,也可以由七种潜在原因(即缺血、感染、神经病变、伤口愈合不良、轻微创伤、皮肤溃疡、坏疽)的各种组合构成,在研究人员综合各种客观和主观数据后凭经验确定。计算了可归因于每个组成原因的截肢比例估计值。确定了23条糖尿病肢体截肢的独特因果路径。八种常见的组成原因组合导致了73%的截肢。大多数路径由多种原因组成,只有急性动脉闭塞导致的严重缺血是截肢的单一原因。轻微创伤、皮肤溃疡和伤口愈合失败的因果顺序适用于72%的截肢,通常还伴有感染和坏疽。我们在因果路径的定义中规定了精确的标准,以估计各种原因导致的截肢累积比例。46%的截肢归因于缺血,59%归因于感染,61%归因于神经病变,81%归因于伤口愈合不良,84%归因于溃疡,55%归因于坏疽,81%归因于最初的轻微创伤。在69至80例截肢之前,有一个可识别且可能可预防的关键事件,在大多数情况下是涉及导致皮肤损伤的轻微创伤的事件。定义易导致糖尿病肢体截肢的因果路径提示了可能有效预防糖尿病肢体丧失的实际干预措施。