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1.
Restoration of arterial flow to a severely ischemic extremity remains a major challenge in vascular surgery. The procedure of choice for limb salvage is a bypass utilizing reversed saphenous vein. When the saphenous vein is unsuitable or unavailable, the surgeon must turn to endarterectomy of the femoral and popliteal systems or synthetic, composite, heterologous, autologous, or homologous grafts. To avoid the problems associated with these techniques and to improve the results of limb salvage, we have revived and modified the technique of superficial femoral artery eversion endarterectomy and combined it with other reconstructive techniques in an effort to salvage the severely ischemic lower extremity. Of 38 patients treated for incapacitating claudication or severe limb ischemia during a one-year period, six patients had an unsuitable saphenous vein for the proposed reconstruction. Five of these patients underwent superficial femoral eversion endarterectomy. These six patients have 100% patency at follow-up seven months to one year postoperatively. Our experience with these six patients, including angiographic follow-up, will be presented.  相似文献   

2.
Advances in reconstructive surgery have allowed for impressive salvage after severe lower-extremity trauma but not without complications when compared with immediate below-knee amputation. Several amputation index scores have been developed to help predict successful salvage as defined by a viable rather than a functional extremity. The purpose of this study was to evaluate retrospectively the predictive value of the amputation index scores and to assess prospectively overall health status and specific dysfunction in successful limb salvage and primary and secondary amputation by administering standardized generic and specific outcomes questionnaires (Medical Outcomes Study 36-Item Short-Form Health Survey, Western Ontario and MacMaster Universities Osteoarthritis Index). A retrospective chart review identified 55 severe lower-extremity injuries (Gustilo Type IIIB and IIIC) over a 12-year period (1984 to 1996). Forty-six severe open tibial fractures in 45 patients underwent attempted salvage. All required soft-tissue coverage by either local or free flap or vascular repair for leg salvage. The attempted-salvage group was subdivided into successful salvage and secondary amputation. The other nine patients underwent a primary amputation. There were no statistically significant differences in terms of patient demographics or other injuries (Injury Severity Score) in the three groups. Forty-eight of 54 patients with an average 5-year follow-up completed a validated generic and specific outcomes health questionnaire. In the attempted-salvage group, 89 percent of patients had a successful salvage and 11 percent came to a secondary amputation. The amputation index scores correctly predicted an amputation in 32 percent of patients. The magnitude of the amputation index scores did not correlate with the physical outcomes scores and were not found to add any significant value of information to the surgeon's decision making. Patients undergoing primary and secondary amputation had a worse physical outcomes score (28 versus 38) than successful salvage (p < 0.007). Even so, the SF-36 (physical component score) outcomes score for this group of injured extremities, regardless as to whether salvaged or amputated, was as low as or lower than that of many serious medical illnesses, suggesting that severe lower-extremity trauma impairs health as much as or more than being seriously ill. The mental component score in this group was comparable to that of a healthy population (49 versus 50), which implies the disability is primarily physical rather than psychological. Ninety-two percent of patients preferred their salvaged leg to an amputation at any stage of their injury, and none would have preferred a primary amputation.  相似文献   

3.
Tissue of amputated or nonsalvageable limbs may be used for reconstruction of complex defects resulting from tumor and trauma. This is the "spare parts" concept.By definition, fillet flaps are axial-pattern flaps that can function as composite-tissue transfers. They can be used as pedicled or free flaps and are a beneficial reconstruction strategy for major defects, provided there is tissue available adjacent to these defects.From 1988 to 1999, 104 fillet flap procedures were performed on 94 patients (50 pedicled finger and toe fillets, 36 pedicled limb fillets, and 18 free microsurgical fillet flaps).Nineteen pedicled finger fillets were used for defects of the dorsum or volar aspect of the hand, and 14 digital defects and 11 defects of the forefoot were covered with pedicled fillets from adjacent toes and fingers. The average size of the defects was 23 cm2. Fourteen fingers were salvaged. Eleven ray amputations, two extended procedures for coverage of the hand, and nine forefoot amputations were prevented. In four cases, a partial or total necrosis of a fillet flap occurred (one patient with diabetic vascular disease, one with Dupuytren's contracture, and two with high-voltage electrical injuries).Thirty-six pedicled limb fillet flaps were used in 35 cases. In 12 cases, salvage of above-knee or below-knee amputated stumps was achieved with a plantar neurovascular island pedicled flap. In seven other cases, sacral, pelvic, groin, hip, abdominal wall, or lumbar defects were reconstructed with fillet-of-thigh or entire-limb fillet flaps. In five cases, defects of shoulder, head, neck, and thoracic wall were covered with upper-arm fillet flaps. In nine cases, defects of the forefoot were covered by adjacent dorsal or plantar fillet flaps. In two other cases, defects of the upper arm or the proximal forearm were reconstructed with a forearm fillet. The average size of these defects was 512 cm2. Thirteen major joints were salvaged, three stumps were lengthened, and nine foot or forefoot amputations were prevented. One partial flap necrosis occurred in a patient with a fillet-of-sole flap. In another case, wound infection required revision and above-knee amputation with removal of the flap.Nine free plantar fillet flaps were performed-five for coverage of amputation stumps and four for sacral pressure sores. Seven free forearm fillet flaps, one free flap of forearm and hand, and one forearm and distal upper-arm fillet flap were performed for defect coverage of the shoulder and neck area. The average size of these defects was 432 cm2. Four knee joints were salvaged and one above-knee stump was lengthened. No flap necrosis was observed. One patient died of acute respiratory distress syndrome 6 days after surgery.Major complications were predominantly encountered in small finger and toe fillet flaps. Overall complication rate, including wound dehiscence and secondary grafting, was 18 percent. This complication rate seems acceptable. Major complications such as flap loss, flap revision, or severe infection occurred in only 7.5 percent of cases. The majority of our cases resulted from severe trauma with infected and necrotic soft tissues, disseminated tumor disease, or ulcers in elderly, multimorbid patients.On the basis of these data, a classification was developed that facilitates multicenter comparison of procedures and their clinical success. Fillet flaps facilitate reconstruction in difficult and complex cases. The spare part concept should be integrated into each trauma algorithm to avoid additional donor-site morbidity and facilitate stump-length preservation or limb salvage.  相似文献   

4.
Rest pain, tissue loss, and gangrene are manifestations of critical limb ischemia caused by peripheral arterial disease and define a patient subgroup at highest risk for major limb amputation. Patients with nonhealing lower extremity wounds should be screened for the risk factors for peripheral arterial disease and offered noninvasive vascular testing. The diagnosis of critical limb ischemia mandates prompt institution of medical and surgical management to achieve the best chance of limb salvage. Surgical intervention has evolved from primary amputation to open bypass to the present era of endovascular therapy. The goals of surgical bypass and endovascular therapy are to improve perfusion sufficiently to permit healing. Despite poorer patency rates and the more frequent need for reintervention, endovascular therapy has been shown in multiple retrospective studies to achieve limb salvage similar to open bypass. Only one large, prospective, randomized controlled trial exists comparing open bypass with endovascular therapy: The Bypass versus Angioplasty in Severe Limb Ischemia of the Leg (BASIL) trial. Close clinical surveillance and serial monitoring of limb perfusion by means of noninvasive arterial studies are needed to determine the need for further vascular intervention. Limb salvage patients suffer from multiple comorbidities and benefit from a multidisciplinary, team approach to care.  相似文献   

5.
When sufficient margins of resection surrounding the tumor can be achieved, limb salvage surgery, as opposed to amputation, has become the standard of care in treating patients with bone and soft tissue sarcoma of the extremities. Currently, 90-95% of patients with primary malignant bone and soft-tissue tumors involving the extremities can be treated safely with wide resection and limb salvage surgery with a low risk of recurrence and the same disease-free survival rate as amputative surgery. However, discussions persist regarding the indications and criteria, and whether limb salvage provides superior functional results and quality of life for cancer patients. In this study we aimed to review and update the current criteria, indications and contraindications of limb salvage surgery and discuss its role in the quality of life of cancer patients.  相似文献   

6.

Background

An understanding of the biology of bone and soft-tissue sarcomas, knowledge of adjuvant therapies and refinement in techniques of reconstructive surgery have allowed limb-sparing and limb salvage surgery to become a reality in the management of malignant tumors of the extremities. Functional limb salvage following radical resection has become a possibility in many resectable tumors by the use of alloplastic prostheses, homograft or autogenous bone for skeletal reconstitution combined with vascularized soft tissue coverage. Although the free fibula flap has been well described for reconstructions of the mandible and oral cavity, it has not been widely presented as an ideal tool to preserve extremities and to circumvent amputation.

Patients and methods

We describe the complex surgical reconstruction in four patients with primary sarcomas of the extremities. The sarcomas (Ewing's sarcoma, osteosarcoma and epitheloid sarcoma) were resected radically and the massive bone and soft tissue defect was replaced by vascularized free fibula transfer.

Results

We present our experience with versatility of this osteocutaneous flap to allow reconstruction and salvage of extremitity sarcomas. There were no operative or postoperative complication and all the four patients had good limb function. The flap was found to be versatile as it could be used for either upper limb or lower limb and for large defects. The results were better in upper limb than in lower limb.

Conclusions

Free fibular graft was found to be effective for salvaging limb function where a massive bone defect resulted from wide tumor resection in the extremities.  相似文献   

7.
Muscle-flap coverage of exposed endoprostheses   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
A well-entrenched tenet in the orthopedic community is that dehiscent wounds overlying exposed endoprostheses should be treated by implant removal and delayed reconstruction. A new management protocol utilizing thorough soft-tissue debridement and myocutaneous or muscle-flap coverage was evaluated in four patients at the UCLA Medical Center who presented with exposed endoprostheses. These prostheses were placed for total-joint replacement or limb salvage surgery. All four prostheses and extremities were salvaged without the need for endoprosthesis removal or exchange, and no infections developed. The results suggest that late aseptic wound dehiscence with an exposed endoprosthesis need not be managed with prosthetic removal, arthrodesis, or amputation. This one-stage procedure avoided infection, allowed early mobilization, and shortened hospitalization.  相似文献   

8.
The thoracodorsal artery perforator flap is a relatively new flap that has yet to find its niche in reconstructive surgery. At the authors' institution it has been used for limb salvage, head and neck reconstruction, and trunk reconstruction in cases related to trauma, burns, and malignancy. The authors have found the flap to be advantageous for cranial base reconstruction and for resurfacing the face and oral cavity. The flap has been used successfully for reconstruction of traumatic upper and lower extremity defects, and it can be used as a pedicled flap or as a free tissue transfer. The perforating branches of the thoracodorsal artery offer a robust blood supply to a skin-soft-tissue paddle of 10 to 12 cm x 25 cm, overlying the latissimus dorsi muscle. The average pedicle length is 20 cm (range, 16 to 23 cm), which allows for a safe anastomosis outside the zone of injury in traumatized extremities; the flap can be made sensate by neurorrhaphy with sensory branches of the intercostal nerves. Vascularized bone can be transferred with this flap by taking advantage of the inherent vascular anatomy of the subscapular artery. A total of 30 pedicled and free flap transfers were performed at the authors' institution with an overall complication rate of 23 percent and an overall flap survival rate of 97 percent. Major complications, such as vascular thrombosis, return to the operating room, fistula formation, recurrence of tumor, and flap loss, occurred in 17 percent of the patients. Despite these drawbacks, the authors have found the thoracodorsal artery perforator flap to be a safe and extremely versatile flap that offers significant advantages in acute and delayed reconstruction cases.  相似文献   

9.
Composite grafts in the treatment of osteosarcoma of the proximal humerus   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Treatment of osteosarcoma (OSA) of the proximal humerus poses many difficulties and challenges to the treating team. Between 1993 and 2000, we treated 11 patients (three women, eight men; age range, 17–74 years) suffering from OSA of the proximal humerus by composite: massive allografts and long humeral prosthesis. At presentation, 10 patients were at stage 2-B and one at stage 3-B of OSA. One patient presented with a pathologic fracture. All patients except patient No. 6, received preoperative chemotherapy followed by limb salvage surgery and postoperative chemotherapy.Surgical margins were graded as wide in all patients. Postoperative complications included non-union at the allograft/host junction (which united after auto grafting) and superficial wound infections that resolved after antibiotic therapy. All surgical procedures were performed by a team headed by an orthopedic oncologist and shoulder surgeon. At latest follow-up (December 2001) all patients, with the exception of one (who was at stage 3-B at presentation) were alive, and had good function of the upper limb. It is our opinion that the team approach comprising an orthopedic oncologist and shoulder surgeon greatly contributed to the good surgical outcome, and hence the good survival and functional results of the patients. Bone allograft offers a modular malleable durable solution to the resected bone segment.  相似文献   

10.
A series of 13 patients is described to demonstrate the experience of the authors with free-tissue transfer for limb salvage in patients with purpura fulminans. A total of seven free-flap procedures were performed, with a loss of flap in one patient. The flaps were used for lower-extremity salvage in six patients and for upper-extremity salvage in one. Purpura fulminans is a devastating illness caused by endotoxin-producing bacteria such as meningococcus and pneumococcus. Clotting derangements and systemic vasculitis often lead to widespread tissue necrosis in the extremities. Local tissue is usually not available to cover vital structures in these complex wounds. In these situations, free-tissue transfer is necessary to achieve limb salvage. Microsurgical reconstruction in patients with purpura fulminans is a formidable challenge. Because of high platelet counts and systemic vasculitis, successful microvascular anastomosis is difficult. Abnormally high platelet counts persist well into the subacute and chronic phases of the illness. Pretreatment with antiplatelet agents before microvascular surgery may be beneficial. The systemic nature of the vascular injury does not permit microvascular anastomosis to be performed outside the "zone of injury." Extensive vascular exposure, even at a great distance from the wound, does not reveal a disease-free vessel. The friable intima is difficult to manage with a standard end-to-side anastomosis, but conversion to end-to-end anastomosis may salvage free-tissue transfers in cases in which intimal damage is too severe to sustain a patent anastomosis. Patients often have peripheral neuropathies caused by the underlying disease; however, this resolves with time and is not a contraindication to limb salvage.  相似文献   

11.
The use of microvascular tissue transfer as an adjunct to arterial reconstruction has begun to have a positive impact on limb salvage in patients with advanced arteriosclerosis and nonhealing ischemic wounds. However, many patients with severe peripheral vascular insufficiency not amenable to conventional arterial reconstructive procedures eventually require limb amputation. We have treated 12 patients with advanced peripheral vascular disease and nonhealing ischemic wounds by three different methods. These included distal bypass alone, distal bypass done in conjunction with free-tissue transfer, and free-tissue transfer alone. All bypass grafts were done to vessels at or below the ankle using a reversed saphenous vein. In each case, the distal anastomosis was performed, using the operating microscope and standard microvascular technique. Mean follow-up for these patients is 18 months. Distal bypass alone resulted in limb salvage in three of five patients. In the combined bypass and free-flap group, three of five patients had salvage of their threatened extremity at a 1-year follow-up. Two patients with ischemic ulcers, rest pain, and unsuitable distal vessels for bypass were treated with free-tissue transfer alone. This resulted in healed wounds, limb salvage, and complete resolution of the rest pain symptoms in both patients. When advanced ischemia is complicated by large areas of tissue loss, combined bypass and microvascular free-issue transfer, performed in stages or simultaneously, is safe and can often result in limb salvage. In the rare instance of a completely obliterated distal runoff bed, free-tissue transfer alone may provide not only a healed wound, but also a means of "indirect" revascularization of the extremity and limb salvage.  相似文献   

12.
Advances in free-tissue transfer have allowed for lower limb salvage in patients with significant peripheral vascular disease and limb-threatening soft-tissue wounds. The authors retrospectively reviewed their 10-year experience with free flaps for limb salvage in patients with peripheral vascular disease to assess postoperative complication rates and long-term functional outcome. They identified all patients undergoing free-tissue transfer with significant peripheral vascular disease and otherwise unreconstructible soft-tissue defects. Charts were reviewed for perioperative and long-term outcome. Parameters studied included perioperative morbidity and mortality, flap success, bypass graft patency, ambulatory results, and long-term limb and patient survival. Survival data were analyzed using life-table analysis, Kaplan-Meier survival analysis, and Cox testing. A total of 79 flaps were examined in 75 patients with peripheral vascular disease from July of 1990 to November of 1999. All patients would have required a major amputation had free-tissue transfer not been performed. Mean age was 60 years, average hospital stay was 32 days, and perioperative mortality was 5 percent. Within the first 30 days after operation, there were four cases of primary flap loss, and another two were lost as the result of bypass graft failure (8 percent); five of these cases resulted in amputation. There were no primary flap failures after 30 days. Follow-up ranged to 91 months (mean, 24 months). During this time, another 14 limbs were lost, most commonly because of progressive gangrene and/or infection in sites remote from the still-viable free flap. Using Kaplan-Meier survival analysis, 5-year flap survival was 77 percent, limb salvage 63 percent, and patient survival 67 percent. Sixty-six percent of patients were able to ambulate independently with the use of their reconstructed limb at least 1 year after hospital discharge, although some of these later went on to amputation. Free-tissue transfer for lower extremity reconstruction can be performed with acceptable morbidity and mortality in patients with peripheral vascular disease. Flap loss is low, and limb salvage, ambulation, and long-term survival rates in these patients are excellent.  相似文献   

13.
Bone sarcomas are the fourth most common cancer in individuals under 25 years of age. Limb salvage procedures have become increasingly popular for the treatment of osteosarcomas as they have functional and physiological benefits over traditional amputative procedures. The purpose of this study was to assess locomotor patterns post lower limb salvage surgery via electromyographic and energetic measurement techniques on a group of intra-articular knee osteosarcoma patients greater than one year post surgery. A retrospective outcome study was undertaken on 20 limb salvage patients (10♀, 10♂) recruited from the Queensland Bone Tumour Registry. Results showed prolonged activation of rectus femoris and prolonged co-contraction of the rectus femoris and hamstring muscles (p > 0.05) in the affected limb of the limb salvage group compared to a control group. Prolonged rectus femoris activation and co-contraction was also evident in the unaffected lower limb suggesting alterations in gait programming within higher neuronal centres. The results are important for the development of rehabilitation programs as they suggest an overall reprogramming of the gait pattern, thereby limiting the impact of conventional strength and stretching interventions.  相似文献   

14.
An extensive series reviewing the benefits and drawbacks of use of the gracilis muscle in lower-extremity trauma has not previously been collected. In this series of 50 patients, the use of microvascular free transfer of the gracilis muscle for lower-extremity salvage in acute traumatic wounds and posttraumatic chronic wounds is reviewed. In addition, the wound size, injury patterns, problems, and results unique to the use of the gracilis as a donor muscle for lower-extremity reconstruction are identified. In a 7-year period from 1991 to 1998, 50 patients underwent lower-extremity reconstruction using microvascular free gracilis transfer at the University of Maryland Shock Trauma Center, Johns Hopkins Hospital, and Johns Hopkins Bayview Medical Center. There were 22 patients who underwent reconstruction for coverage of acute lower-extremity traumatic soft-tissue defects associated with open fractures. The majority of patients were victims of high-energy injuries with 91 percent involving motor vehicle or motorcycle accidents, gunshot wounds, or pedestrians struck by vehicles. Ninety-one percent of the injuries were Gustilo type IIIb tibial fractures and 9 percent were Gustilo type IIIc. The mean soft-tissue defect size was 92.2 cm2. Successful limb salvage was achieved in 95 percent of patients. Twenty-eight patients with previous Gustilo type IIIb tibia-fibula fractures presented with posttraumatic chronic wounds characterized by osteomyelitis or deep soft-tissue infection. Successful free-tissue transfer was accomplished in 26 of 28 patients (93 percent). All but one of the patients in this group who underwent successful limb salvage (26 of 27, or 96 percent) are now free of infection. Use of the gracilis muscle as a free-tissue transfer has been shown to be a reliable and predictable tool in lower-extremity reconstruction, with a flap success and limb salvage rate comparable to those in other large studies.  相似文献   

15.
ObjectiveTo assess the effectiveness of two mechanical methods of blood conservation in reducing the need for allogeneic red blood cells or coagulation products during cardiac surgery.DesignRandomised controlled trial.SettingRegional cardiac centre in a teaching hospital in Southampton.Participants263 adults aged 18-80 years undergoing elective coronary artery bypass surgery entered the study, of whom 252 completed the trial. All patients received routine perioperative care. Patients were allocated to one of three treatment groups: intraoperative cell salvage, intraoperative cell salvage with acute perioperative normovolaemic haemodilution, or no mechanical blood conservation. There were 84 patients in each group.ResultsOf the patients in the intraoperative cell salvage group, 26 were given a transfusion of allogeneic blood, compared with 43 in the control group (odds ratio 0.43 (95% confidence interval 0.23 to 0.80)). The mean number of units of allogeneic blood transfused per patient in the intraoperative cell salvage group was 0.68 units (SD=1.55), compared with 1.07 (1.56) units in the control group. 32 of the patients in the intraoperative cell salvage group were given any blood product, compared with 47 in the control group (odds ratio 0.47 (0.25 to 0.89); P=0.019). Combining acute perioperative normovolaemic haemodilution with intraoperative cell salvage conferred no additional benefits.ConclusionsAn intraoperative cell salvage device should be used in elective coronary artery bypass grafting. Pharmacological strategies may achieve further reductions in blood transfusions. Yet further reductions in blood transfusions could be achieved if the lower safe limit of haemoglobin concentration in patients undergoing cardiac surgery were known.

What is already known on this topic

Patients undergoing elective coronary artery bypass surgery often need a blood transfusionRecent meta-analyses have shown that the mechanical blood conservation techniques of intraoperative cell salvage and acute perioperative normovolaemic haemodilution may reduce the need for transfusion, but flawed methods in trials mean that clear evidence in cardiac surgery is lacking

What this study adds

Intraoperative cell salvage significantly reduces the number of patients needing an allogeneic blood transfusionCombining acute perioperative normovolaemic haemodilution with intraoperative cell salvage does not confer any additional benefit  相似文献   

16.
B S Bull  M H Bull 《Blood cells》1990,16(1):5-20; discussion 20-3
Disseminated intravascular coagulopathy (DIC) and/or increased vascular permeability in the lungs (ARDS) or systemic circulation (anasarca) has been seen in an occasional patient following the administration of washed autologous red cells. We have found that platelets and leukocytes, activated by the process of salvage, can contaminate such red cell suspensions. Apparently, activation begins with the mechanical deposition of platelets on the centrifuge bowl wall during the cell-concentration phase of blood salvage if there has been substantial prior dilution of the salvaged blood with saline. Electron microscopy of the deposit reveals activated, degranulated platelets lining the inner surface of the bowl. There is a preferential "homing" of specific leukocyte types to local regions of the deposit. On the basis of morphological evidence, we hypothesize that these mechanically activated platelets release leukoattractant substances, including arachidonate-rich phospholipids which trigger the oxidative burst enzymatic pathway in exposed phagocytic cells. These cells, when reinfused, cause increased vascular permeability. This presents clinically as ARDS or anasarca, whereas DIC results from reinfused platelet phospholipid plus accompanying cellular debris.  相似文献   

17.
18.
Objectives To characterize the information needs of family physicians by collecting the questions they asked about patient care during consultations and to classify these in ways that would be useful to developers of knowledge bases. Design An observational study in which investigators visited physicians for two half-days and collected their questions. Taxonomies were developed to characterize the clinical topic and generic type of information sought for each question. Setting Eastern Iowa. Participants Random sample of 103 family physicians. Main outcome measures Number of questions posed, pursued, and answered; topic and generic type of information sought for each question; time spent pursuing answers; and information resources used. Results Participants asked a total of 1,101 questions. Questions about drug prescribing, obstetrics and gynecology, and adult infectious disease were most common, comprising 36% of the total. The taxonomy of generic questions included 69 categories; the three most common types, comprising 24% of all questions, were "What is the cause of symptom X?" "What is the dose of drug X?" and "How should I manage disease or finding X?" Answers to most questions (n = 702 [64%]) were not immediately pursued, but of those pursued, most (n = 318 [80%]) were answered. Physicians spent an average of less than 2 minutes pursuing an answer, and they used readily available print and human resources. Only two questions led to a formal literature search. Conclusions Family physicians in this study did not pursue answers to most of their questions. Questions about patient care can be organized into a limited number of generic types, which could help guide the efforts of knowledge-base developers.  相似文献   

19.
目的:研究四肢骨折矫形术后患者慢性手术后疼痛的发生率及其危险因素。方法:以2014年12月-2017年10月于我院接受四肢骨折矫形术患者300例为研究对象,于术后6个月分析慢性手术后疼痛的发生率。收集所有患者年龄、性别、体重、术前疼痛程度、二次手术、麻醉方式、术后镇痛、术后引流、合并骨质疏松、骨折类型以及骨折部位等资料,并采用单因素以及多因素Logistic回归分析术后疼痛的危险因素。结果:术后6个月内有96名患者术后发生慢性手术后疼痛,发生率为32.00%(96/300)。单因素分析结果显示:慢性手术后疼痛患者与术前疼痛程度、是否二次手术、麻醉方式、术后有无镇痛、是否合并骨质疏松、骨折类型、骨折部位有关(P0.05),与患者的性别、年龄、体重、术后是否引流无关(P0.05)。多因素Logistic回归分析结果显示:术前重度疼痛、二次手术、麻醉方式为非全麻、术后无镇痛、合并骨质疏松、开放性骨折以及下肢骨折均是四肢骨折矫形术后发生慢性手术后疼痛的独立危险因素(P0.05)。结论:四肢骨折矫形术后患者慢性手术后疼痛的发生率较高,术前重度疼痛、二次手术、麻醉方式为非全麻、术后无镇痛、合并骨质疏松、开放性骨折以及下肢骨折均增加了慢性手术后疼痛的发生风险,临床应根据危险因素给予针对性的干预措施。  相似文献   

20.
Current literature indicates poor survival and limb salvage rates in renal failure diabetic patients who present with ulcerated or gangrenous lower extremities. Even in those limbs that were successfully revascularized, the amputation rate was as high as 37 percent. This has led some to advocate immediate amputation when treating the threatened limb of a renal failure diabetic patient. The authors reviewed all renal failure diabetic patients in their wound registry to determine whether such pessimism was warranted. The authors then analyzed the relative roles of revascularization and aggressive wound care on long-term limb salvage. Forty-five consecutive renal failure diabetic patients with 71 wounds in 54 limbs were identified. Twenty-seven patients had chronic renal insufficiency, 15 patients had end-stage renal disease, and three patients received kidney transplants. The revascularization procedures (46 percent of all limbs) included angioplasty, femoral-popliteal, femoral-distal, and popliteal-distal bypasses. Forty-three amputations in combination with 67 soft-tissue repairs (delayed primary wound closure, skin grafts, local flaps, pedicled flaps, and free flaps) were necessary to close the defects. After a mean follow-up of over 3 years, the data indicate that 79 percent of wounds healed, 89 percent of all limbs were salvaged, and 49 percent of patients survived. Revascularization improved the threatened limb's salvage rate from negligible to a level similar to that of the adequately vascularized limb. Fifteen out of 71 wounds did not heal because of the patient's early postoperative death, ischemia not amenable to revascularization, or noncompliance. Six below-knee amputations were performed (one despite a patent bypass and five in adequately vascularized patients). The average time for wounds to heal in the revascularized patients was 79 days versus 71 days in adequately vascularized patients. There was an overall 43 percent complication rate. Of the patients who were alive after the 3-year follow-up, 73 percent were independently ambulating, whereas 27 percent were bound to wheelchair or bed. Eighty-two percent of patients were very satisfied with the salvage attempt, 18 percent were moderately satisfied, and all patients said they would go through the process again. The authors believe that salvaging the threatened extremity in the renal failure diabetic patient is justified whether or not the limb requires revascularization. Revascularization improved the limb salvage rate, patient survival, and days for wounds to heal to a level comparable to that of the adequately vascularized limb. The key to subsequently achieving high salvage rates is the quality of perioperative wound care (e.g., serial debridements, antibiotics, dressings) and the timing and selection of appropriate soft-tissue coverage.  相似文献   

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