Division of Vascular Surgery, Department of Surgery, Riley Hospital for Children, Indiana University School of Medicine, Indianapolis, Ind.
Division of Pediatric Surgery, Department of Surgery, Riley Hospital for Children, Indiana University School of Medicine, Indianapolis, Ind.
J Vasc Surg. 2018 May;67(5):1480-1483. doi: 10.1016/j.jvs.2017.09.036. Epub 2017 Dec 8.
Acute limb ischemia (ALI) in infants poses a challenge to the clinician secondary to poor operative outcomes, limb loss risk, and lifelong morbidity. This retrospective study reviewed a 10-year institutional experience with the nonoperative management of ALI in infants.
Infants (aged ≤12 months) diagnosed with ALI by duplex ultrasound and treated with initial nonoperative management at a tertiary care children's hospital were identified through vascular laboratory arterial duplex ultrasound records and International Classification of Diseases and Current Procedural Terminology codes associated with ALI. Demographics of the patients, injury characteristics, treatment administered, and outcomes were abstracted by chart review and presented using descriptive statistics.
During the study period, a total of 25 (28% female) infant patients were diagnosed with ALI. The average age for this cohort was 3.5 ± 3.2 months (standard deviation). Most cases were secondary to iatrogenic injury (88%) from arterial cannulation. Injury sites were more concentrated to the lower extremities (84%) compared with the upper. Absence of Doppler signals was noted in 64% of infants, whereas limb cyanosis was observed in 60% at the time of presentation. Infants were initially treated with anticoagulation (80%) when possible. Two patients failed to respond to nonoperative management and required thrombolysis secondary to progression of thrombus burden while anticoagulated. There were no major (above-ankle) amputations at 30 days. Three deaths occurred within 30 days; all were unrelated to limb ischemia. In the 30-day survivors, overall duration of follow-up was 53.5 ± 38.5 months. One infant required above-knee amputation 6 weeks after diagnosis, resulting in an overall limb salvage rate of 96% on follow-up. Long-term morbidity included two patients with a chronic wound of the affected limb and one patient with limb length discrepancy. No subjects reported claudication at the latest follow-up appointment. In addition, all patients were independently ambulatory except for one adolescent girl who was using a walker with leg braces.
In contrast to the adult population, ALI in infants can be managed with anticoagulation alone with good results. Long-term follow-up continues to demonstrate excellent functional results and minimal disability.
由于手术效果不佳、肢体丧失风险和终身发病率高,婴儿急性肢体缺血(ALI)给临床医生带来了挑战。本回顾性研究回顾了一家三级儿童医院对婴儿 ALI 进行非手术治疗的 10 年机构经验。
通过血管实验室动脉双功超声记录和与 ALI 相关的国际疾病分类和当前程序术语代码,确定在一家三级儿童医院通过双功超声诊断为 ALI 并接受初始非手术治疗的婴儿(年龄≤12 个月)。通过图表审查提取患者的人口统计学、损伤特征、给予的治疗和结果,并使用描述性统计进行呈现。
在研究期间,共有 25 名(28%为女性)婴儿患者被诊断为 ALI。该队列的平均年龄为 3.5±3.2 个月(标准差)。大多数病例是由动脉插管引起的医源性损伤(88%)所致。与上肢相比,损伤部位更集中在下肢(84%)。64%的婴儿无多普勒信号,60%的婴儿在就诊时出现肢体发绀。当可能时,婴儿最初接受抗凝治疗(80%)。由于在抗凝时血栓负荷增加,有 2 名患者需要溶栓治疗,未能对非手术治疗做出反应。30 天时无主要(踝上)截肢。30 天内有 3 例死亡,均与肢体缺血无关。30 天存活者的总随访时间为 53.5±38.5 个月。1 名婴儿在诊断后 6 周需要行膝上截肢,导致随访时肢体总存活率为 96%。长期发病率包括 2 名患者患肢慢性伤口和 1 名患者肢体长度差异。在最新的随访中,没有患者报告跛行。此外,除了一名使用带腿支架的助行器的青春期女孩外,所有患者均能独立行走。
与成人人群相比,婴儿 ALI 单独使用抗凝治疗可取得良好效果。长期随访继续显示出极好的功能结果和最小的残疾。