scholarly journals Life and Limb: Current Concepts in Endovascular Treatment of Extremity Trauma

2021 ◽  
Vol 38 (01) ◽  
pp. 064-074
Author(s):  
John J. Weaver ◽  
Jeffrey F.B. Chick ◽  
Eric J. Monroe ◽  
Guy E. Johnson

AbstractTraumatic injury is the leading cause of death worldwide in younger patient populations and extremity trauma with associated vascular injury accounts for many trauma-related deaths. Iatrogenic injury is also a common cause of extremity vascular trauma and the incidence of iatrogenic injury will likely increase as endovascular techniques continue to become more ubiquitous. For many vascular injuries involving the extremities, surgical repair is viewed as the standard of care. Historically, endovascular techniques did not play a role in the treatment of these vascular injuries, rather they were utilized only as part of the diagnostic assessment; however, there is an increasing trend toward endovascular management of extremity vascular trauma. No validated, widely implemented algorithm to select patients for endovascular intervention exists. Transcatheter techniques, however, play an important role in the management of these patients. For arterial injuries, embolization can be used to rapidly achieve hemostasis if the vessel can be sacrificed. More advanced endovascular techniques such as stent-graft placement may be best employed in the context of isolated, proximal extremity injuries, although there is increasing literature supporting the use of advanced techniques for more distal arterial injuries. The management of peripheral venous trauma remains controversial; however, there is growing data describing successful endovascular management of some peripheral venous injuries. The purpose of this article is to review extremity vascular trauma, concepts of injury triage, endovascular techniques, and intraprocedural considerations.

VASA ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 48 (1) ◽  
pp. 65-71 ◽  
Author(s):  
Cheong J. Lee ◽  
Rory Loo ◽  
Max V. Wohlauer ◽  
Parag J. Patel

Abstract. Although management paradigms for certain arterial trauma, such as aortic injuries, have moved towards an endovascular approach, the application of endovascular techniques for the treatment of peripheral arterial injuries continues to be debated. In the realm of peripheral vascular trauma, popliteal arterial injuries remain a devastating condition with significant rates of limb loss. Expedient management is essential and surgical revascularization has been the gold standard. Initial clinical assessment of vascular injury is aided by readily available imaging techniques such as duplex ultrasonography and high resolution computed tomographic angiography. Conventional catheter based angiography, however, remain the gold standard in the determination of vascular injury. There are limited data examining the outcomes of endovascular techniques to address popliteal arterial injuries. In this review, we examine the imaging modalities and current approaches and data regarding endovascular techniques for the management popliteal arterial trauma.


2020 ◽  
pp. bmjmilitary-2020-001508 ◽  
Author(s):  
Amila S Ratnayake ◽  
M Bala ◽  
C J Fox ◽  
A U Jayatilleke ◽  
S P B Thalgaspitiya ◽  
...  

ObjectiveFor more than half a century, surgeons who managed vascular injuries were guided by a 6-hour maximum ischaemic time dogma in their decision to proceed with vascular reconstruction or not. Contemporary large animal survival model experiments aimed at redefining the critical ischaemic time threshold concluded this to be less than 5 hours. Our clinical experience from recent combat vascular trauma contradicts this dogma with limb salvage following vascular reconstruction with an average ischaemic time of 6 hours.MethodsDuring an 8-month period of the Sri Lankan Civil War, all patients with penetrating extremity vascular injuries were prospectively recorded by a single surgeon and retrospectively analysed. A total of 76 arterial injuries was analysed for demography, injury anatomy and physiology, treatment and outcomes. Subsequent statistical analysis was performed to evaluate the impact of independent variables to include; injury anatomy, concomitant venous, skeletal trauma, shock at presentation and time delay from injury to reconstruction.ResultsIn this study, the 76 extremity arterial injuries had a median ischaemic time of 290 (IQR 225–375) min. Segmental arterial injury (p=0.02), skeletal trauma (p=0.05) and fasciotomy (p=0.03) were found to have a stronger correlation to subsequent amputation than ischaemic time.ConclusionsMultiple factors affect limb viability following compromised distal circulation and our data show a trend towards various subsets of limbs that are more vulnerable due to inherent or acquired paucity of collateral circulation. Early identification and prioritisation of these limbs could achieve functional limb salvage if recognised. Further prospective research should look into the clinical, biochemical and morphological markers to facilitate selection and prioritisation of limb revascularisation.


2020 ◽  
Vol 12 (3) ◽  
Author(s):  
Diogo Rocha Carvalho ◽  
José Oliveira-Pinto ◽  
António Neves ◽  
Joana Pimenta Santos ◽  
João Rocha Neves ◽  
...  

Vascular injuries following anterior shoulder dislocations are rare, with an estimated incidence of 1-2%. The formation of an axillary artery pseudoaneurysm secondary to vascular trauma is a possible late complication and frequently underdiagnosed since it may remain asymptomatic for many years. A rupture of a pseudoaneurysm may occur either from the dislocation itself or after forceful reduction attempts. A ruptured pseudoaneurysm of the axillary artery is a medical emergency and may result in significative upper-limb morbidity or even patient mortality. Nowadays, endovascular techniques have progressively gained ground for the treatment of such lesion, especially in an emergency context. In the present article, the authors present the case of a 77-years-old male patient with a rupture of a pseudoaneurysm of the left axillary artery after repeated forceful reductions of an anterior glenohumeral dislocation and its treatment with percutaneous endovascular stenting.


2017 ◽  
Vol 1 (1) ◽  
pp. 22-27
Author(s):  
Edwin R Faulconer ◽  
Rachel M Russo ◽  
Anders J Davidson ◽  
Meryl A Simon ◽  
Erik S DeSoucy ◽  
...  

Hemorrhage is the second leading cause of death in trauma and non-compressible torso hemorrhage is the leading cause of preventable death within this population. Vascular injuries to the pelvis and lower extremity junctional zone may be difficult to control with direct pressure and complex to approach with open surgery. Endovascular interventions such as balloon occlusion, stenting and embolization are potential alternatives or adjuncts to traditional open surgery in patients with blunt or penetrating vascular injuries to the pelvis. This review of the literature will outline contemporary endovascular management strategies for iliac and junctional zone injuries.


2021 ◽  
Vol 38 (01) ◽  
pp. 053-063
Author(s):  
Ananth K. Vellimana ◽  
Jayson Lavie ◽  
Arindam Rano Chatterjee

AbstractCervical carotid and vertebral artery traumatic injuries can have a devastating natural history. This article reviews the epidemiology, mechanisms of injury, clinical presentation, and classification systems pertinent to consideration of endovascular treatment. The growing role of modern endovascular techniques for the treatment of these diseases is presented to equip endovascular surgeons with a framework for critically assessing patients presenting with traumatic cervical cerebrovascular injury.


2017 ◽  
Vol 7 (4) ◽  
pp. 434-442 ◽  
Author(s):  
Romaric Loffroy ◽  
Olivier Chevallier ◽  
Sophie Gehin ◽  
Marco Midulla ◽  
Pierre-Emmanuel Berthod ◽  
...  

2018 ◽  
Vol 08 (04) ◽  
pp. 258-262
Author(s):  
Ahsin Manzoor Bhatti ◽  
Junaid Mansoor ◽  
Haroon Sabir Khan

Objective: To analyze errors in primary treatment of vascular injuries and delayed presentations of missed vascular injuries as a surrogate indicator of need for improved vascular surgical training of upcoming general surgeons. Materials and methods: This retrospective observational study was carried out at vascular surgery department of two tertiary care hospitals of Armed Forces from Jan 2012 to June 2017. Hospital records of all patients with vascular trauma were analyzed for presence of pitfalls in primary treatment and delayed presentation of missed vascular injuries which resulted in redo surgeries or adverse outcomes. Results: Out of 256 patients with vascular injury sequel 41 had either a problem in primary treatment or presented with delayed complications of missed injuries. The omissions can be divided into: missed injuries (24/41), technical errors in initial repair (12/24), reperfusion of mangled Extremity (3/41) and non availability of a surgeon capable of undertaking vascular repair. The commonest operative fault was failure to debride the vessel adequately and vascular repair under tension. The commonest primary assessment problem was failure to timely appreciate hard signs of vascular injury. Conclusion: With better training and emphasizing the need of thorough clinical examination outcome of vascular trauma can be improved.


2019 ◽  
pp. 1-4
Author(s):  
Jonathan Gates ◽  
Dina Tabello ◽  
Alfred Croteau ◽  
Adam Shen ◽  
Nishant Merchant

There is a well-established body of literature in the management of vascular injuries that underscores the benign natural history of minor so-called occult arterial injuries. The standard approach for the management of the proximity extremity wound has evolved into one of watchful waiting. We present a case of an occult arterial injury that declared itself with an acute arterial bleed after about 30 hours of observation indicating that caution and preparation remain critical in the management of these patients.


2015 ◽  
Vol 21 (6) ◽  
pp. 494-497 ◽  
Author(s):  
Serkan Guneyli ◽  
Mustafa Gok ◽  
Celal Cinar ◽  
Halil Bozkaya ◽  
Mehmet Korkmaz ◽  
...  

2015 ◽  
Vol 42 (4) ◽  
pp. 244-252
Author(s):  
ADENAUER MARINHO DE OLIVEIRA GÓES JUNIOR ◽  
ALLAN DIAS VASCONCELOS RODRIGUES ◽  
FÁBIO BRITO BRAGA ◽  
MARISETH CARVALHO DE ANDRADE ◽  
SIMONE DE CAMPOS VIEIRA ABIB

ABSTRACTObjective:to evaluate the incidence of unfavorable outcomes in vascular trauma patients and their possible correlation to the distance between the city where the injury was sustained and the hospital where the patient received definitive treatment.Methods:descriptive and retrospective study. Data were collected from medical records of patients submitted to surgical procedures for arterial or venous injuries from February 2011 to February 2013 at the only trauma center providing vascular surgery in a vast area of the Amazon region. Trauma date, patient gender and age, mechanism and anatomic topography of injury, surgical management, need for surgical re-intervention, hospitalization period, postoperative complications, mortality and limb amputation rates were analyzed. The incidence of unfavorable outcomes was assessed according to the distance between the city where the vascular injury was sustained and the trauma center.Results: One hundred seventy-three patients with 255 vascular injuries were analyzed; 95.95% were male (p<0.05), mean age of 28.92 years; 47.4% were caused by firearm projectiles (p<0.05); topographic distribution: 45.66% lower limbs (p<0.05), 37.57% upper limbs, 6.94% abdominal, 5.2% thoracic and 4.62% were cervical vascular injuries; 51.42% of patients required hospitalization for seven days or less (p<0.05); limb amputation was necessary in 15.6% and the overall mortality was 6.36%.Conclusion:distances greater than 200Km were associated to longer hospitalization period; distances greater than 300Km were associated to increased limb amputation probability; severe vascular trauma have an increased death probability when patients need to travel more than 200Km for surgical treatment.


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