Abstract

Percutaneous intervention for peripheral artery disease has evolved from balloon angioplasty for simple focal lesions to multimodality techniques that enable treatment of severe arterial insufficiency. This technological expansion comes without a standard approach or algorithm, which makes the decision-making process more subjective than objective. Nevertheless, clinical tools are available that can have a favorable effect on patient care, and these promote usage. So, when are standard endovascular techniques (such as balloon and stents) good enough, and when are the latest advances (eg, atherectomy, drug-eluting stents) more appropriate? This section will address these questions for acute limb ischemia (ALI) and chronic critical limb ischemia (CLI). It will also delineate the problem of restenosis, particularly of the superficial femoral artery (SFA), and describe treatment alternatives. The discussion will review the role of drug-eluting stents, atherectomy devices, reentry catheters, and brachytherapy, as well as their potential complications and appropriate remedies. Treatment algorithms for aortoiliac and infrainguinal disease are provided in Figures 1 through 3⇓⇓. Figure 1. Treatment algorithm for acute lower-limb ischemia. *Short infusion of thrombolytic therapy proximal to occlusion can be used to facilitate wire traversal. Figure 2. Simplified treatment algorithm for symptomatic aortoiliac disease in patients deemed candidates for revascularization. In patients with multilevel disease, the aortoiliac segment should be addressed first. TASC indicates TransAtlantic Inter-Society Consensus; AI, aortoiliac; PTA, percutaneous transluminal angioplasty; PE, physical examination; ABI, ankle-brachial index; and U/S, ultrasound. Figure 3. Simplified treatment algorithm for symptomatic infrainguinal peripheral arterial disease, assuming concomitant aortoiliac disease has been treated and the patient is an acceptable candidate for revascularization. *Alternative therapies to PTA include cryotherapy, atherectomy (directional, rotational, ablative), and cutting balloon. †Alternative stent options include stent (graft, balloon expanding, and self expanding) and drug-eluting stent. PTA indicates percutaneous transluminal angioplasty; TASC, TransAtlantic Inter-Society Consensus; PE, physical examination; …

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