Abstract
Criteria for abandoning infrainguinal arterial reconstructions in favor of major amputations should include reliable predictors not only of graft patency, but more importantly, of limb salvage. To evaluate the efficacy of intraoperative outflow resistance measurements in predicting limb salvage after infrainguinal bypasses, we have reviewed 134 such operations (64 femoropopliteal and 70 femorodistal bypasses) performed for critical ischemia. Outflow resistance measurements were divided into quartiles for femoropopliteal bypasses (Group A 0.17 mm Hg/ml/min or less, Group B 0.18 to 0.24 mm Hg/ml/min, Group C 0.25 to 0.4 mm Hg/ml/min, and Group D greater than 0.4 mm Hg/ml/min) and femorodistal bypasses (Group A 0.4 mm Hg/ml/min or less, Group B 0.4 to 0.58 mm Hg/ml/min or less, Group C 0.6 to 1 mm Hg/ml/min, and Group D 1 mm Hg/ml/min or greater). One year limb salvalge rates for patients who underwent femoropopliteal bypass were 95 percent, 92 percent, 87 percent, and 67 percent from the lowest to the highest quartile (difference not statistically significant), and for those who had femorodistal bypass, they were 51 percent, 75 percent, 48 percent, and 0, respectively (p < 0.05). Interestingly, 12 month graft patency and limb salvage rates for patients who underwent femorodistal bypass with outflow resistances between 0.59 and 1 mm Hg/ml/min did not correlate well (22 percent and 48 percent, respectively), whereas for those with outflow resistance greater than than 1 mm Hg/ ml/min, they were 22 percent and 22 percent, respectively. Thus, measurement of intraoperative outflow resistance is a very accurate predictor of limb salvage after infrainguinal bypass operations.
Published Version
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