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Civil and War Peripheral Arterial Trauma: Review of Risk Factors Associated with Limb Loss

Authors :
Dragan M Marković
Lazar Davidovic
Tanja Ille
Ilijas Cinara
Marko Dragas
Dusan Kostic
Source :
Vascular. 13:141-147
Publication Year :
2005
Publisher :
SAGE Publications, 2005.

Abstract

We sought to analyze the early results of civil and war peripheral arterial injury treatment and to identify risk factors associated with limb loss. Between 1992 and 2001, data collected retrospectively and prospectively on 413 patients with 448 peripheral arterial injuries were analyzed. Of these, there were 140 patients with war injuries and 273 patients with civil injuries. The mechanism of injury was gunshot in 40%, blunt injury in 24%, explosive trauma in 20.3%, and stabbing in 15.7% of the cases. The most frequently injured vessels were the femoral arteries (37.3%), followed by the popliteal (27.8%), axillary and brachial (23.5%), and crural arteries (6.5%). Associated injuries, which included bone, nerve, and remote injuries affecting the head, chest, or abdomen, were present in 60.8% of the cases. Surgery was carried out on all patients, with a limb salvage rate of 89.1% and a survival rate of 97.3%. In spite of a rising trend in peripheral arterial injuries, our total and delayed amputation rates remained stable. On statistical analysis, significant risk factors for amputation were found to be failed revascularization, associated injuries, secondary operation, explosive injury, war injury ( p < .01) and arterial contusion with consecutive thrombosis, popliteal artery injury, and late surgery ( p < .05). Peripheral arterial injuries, if inadequately treated, carry a high amputation rate. Explosive injuries are the most likely to lead to amputations, whereas stab injuries are the least likely to do so. The most significant independent risk factor for limb loss was failed revascularization.

Details

ISSN :
1708539X and 17085381
Volume :
13
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Vascular
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....5026a96cefa3971d1271d9ea52711eb3
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1258/rsmvasc.13.3.141