Nr. Borley et al., DISTAL AMPUTATIONS - IMPACT OF THE INTRODUCTION OF FEMOROCRURAL AND FEMOROPEDAL ARTERIAL BYPASS, Annals of the Royal College of Surgeons of England, 80(2), 1998, pp. 99-103
The aim of the study was to assess the impact of the introduction of f
emorodistal arterial bypass grafting on the patterns of lower limb amp
utation and reconstructive surgery, in particular the success rates of
distal, conservative, amputations. Two 2-year cohorts of patients 7 y
ears apart were analysed by a retrospective analysis of departmental a
udit and patient records. Significantly more patients undergoing dista
l amputation were considered to have reconstructible arterial disease
in the later cohort. This was paralleled by an increase in the rate of
suprapopliteal/popliteal and distal arterial bypass and a fall in bel
ow-knee amputation rate in this group of patients. The overall healing
rate and rate of conversion of distal amputations were not adversely
affected by the introduction of femorodistal bypass grafting, despite
the fact that more distal amputees were non-diabetic in this second gr
oup. There was a high rate of success for distal amputations combined
with femorodistal bypass, but the subgroup was too small for statistic
al analysis. We conclude that the use of distal amputation, with or wi
thout distal arterial bypass, offers a promising, although unproven, p
rospect for lower limb conservation even in non-diabetics.