Abstract

Medial sclerosis (MeS) is a chronic systemic vascular disease that mainly affects the arteries of the lower limb. Its prevalence in the general population is approximately 2.5% (range: 1.6% to 10.0%). It is more common in men than in women. This review is based on pertinent publications retrieved by a selective search in PubMed. MeS is the final common pathway of a wide variety of diseases; its pathogenesis is not fully understood. It often remains clinically silent for decades and is usually diagnosed as an incidental finding or in a late stage. MeS with or without atherosclerosis is the most common histologic finding after limb amputation. MeS of the below-the-knee arteries is a major risk factor for chronic critical leg ischemia (OR:13.25, 95% confidence interval: [1.69; 104.16]) and amputation (RR 2.27, [1.89; 2.74]). Patients with peripheral arterial occlusive disease and marked calcification have a much higher risk of amputation (OR 2.88, [1.18; 12.72]) and a higher mortality (OR 5.16, [1.13; 21.61]). MeS is a risk factor for the failure of endovascular treatment of the pedal arteries (OR 4.0, [1.1; 16.6]). The more marked the calcification, the higher the risk of major amputation (HR 10.6 [1.4; 80.7] to HR 15.5 [2.0; 119]). Patients with vascular calcifications have been found to have lower patency rates and higher treatment failure rates two years after open surgical revascularization of the below-the-knee arteries. No pharmacotherapy for MeS is available to date. MeS is an important risk factor for chronic critical lower limb ischemia, amputation, morbidity, and complications, particularly after endovascular and surgical procedures.

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