Mills Joseph L
Division of Vascular and Endovascular Surgery, University of Arizona Health Sciences Center, Room 440, 1501 North Campbell Avenue, Tucson, AZ 85724.
Semin Vasc Surg. 2014 Mar;27(1):16-22. doi: 10.1053/j.semvascsurg.2014.12.002. Epub 2014 Dec 10.
The diagnosis of critical limb ischemia, first defined in 1982, was intended to delineate a patient cohort with a threatened limb and at risk for amputation due to severe peripheral arterial disease. The influence of diabetes and its associated neuropathy on the pathogenesis-threatened limb was an excluded comorbidity, despite its known contribution to amputation risk. The Fontaine and Rutherford classifications of limb ischemia severity have also been used to predict amputation risk and the likelihood of tissue healing. The dramatic increase in the prevalence of diabetes mellitus and the expanding techniques of arterial revascularization has prompted modification of peripheral arterial disease classification schemes to improve outcomes analysis for patients with threatened limbs. The diabetic patient with foot ulceration and infection is at risk for limb loss, with abnormal arterial perfusion as only one determinant of outcome. The wound extent and severity of infection also impact the likelihood of limb loss. To better predict amputation risk, the Society for Vascular Surgery Lower Extremity Guidelines Committee developed a classification of the threatened lower extremity that reflects these important clinical considerations. Risk stratification is based on three major factors that impact amputation risk and clinical management: wound, ischemia, and foot infection. This classification scheme is relevant to the patient with critical limb ischemia because many are also diabetic. Implementation of the wound, ischemia, and foot infection classification system in critical limb ischemia patients is recommended and should assist the clinician in more meaningful analysis of outcomes for various forms of wound and arterial revascularizations procedures required in this challenging, patient population.
严重肢体缺血的诊断最早于1982年确定,旨在界定因严重外周动脉疾病而肢体受到威胁且有截肢风险的患者群体。尽管糖尿病及其相关神经病变对截肢风险有已知影响,但在发病机制中对肢体构成威胁的影响被排除在合并症之外。肢体缺血严重程度的Fontaine和Rutherford分类也被用于预测截肢风险和组织愈合的可能性。糖尿病患病率的急剧上升以及动脉血运重建技术的不断发展,促使对外周动脉疾病分类方案进行修改,以改善对肢体受到威胁患者的预后分析。患有足部溃疡和感染的糖尿病患者有肢体丧失的风险,动脉灌注异常只是结局的一个决定因素。伤口范围和感染严重程度也会影响肢体丧失的可能性。为了更好地预测截肢风险,血管外科学会下肢指南委员会制定了一种对下肢受到威胁情况的分类,该分类反映了这些重要的临床考虑因素。风险分层基于影响截肢风险和临床管理的三个主要因素:伤口、缺血和足部感染。这种分类方案与严重肢体缺血患者相关,因为许多患者也是糖尿病患者。建议在严重肢体缺血患者中实施伤口、缺血和足部感染分类系统,这应有助于临床医生对这一具有挑战性的患者群体所需的各种伤口和动脉血运重建手术的结局进行更有意义的分析。