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MidAtlantic Vascular, LLC

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Contrast Angiography Identifies the level of arterial disease such that ... due to P.A.D. Peripheral ... minor lower extremity amputations ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: MidAtlantic Vascular, LLC


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MidAtlantic Vascular, LLC
Critical Limb Ischemia. P.A.D. Detection,
Treatment, and Referral Paul Sasser MD FACS
3
P.A.D. and Podiatry
  • Podiatrists are positioned to
  • Recognize the early and advanced signs of P.A.D.
  • Improve lower limb wound healing rates
  • Reduce lower limb amputation rates
  • P.A.D. is routinely seen in the daily practice of
    podiatrists
  • The feet can reveal the first signs and symptoms
    of P.A.D.

Podiatric physicians are commonly the first to
thoroughly evaluate a patients legs and feet
regardless of the patients reason for a visit.
4
Clinical Signs of Limb Ischemia
  • Nonhealing wounds
  • Shiny skin
  • Loss of hair growth
  • Cool skin temperature for one limb but not the
    other
  • Pale or bluish skin
  • Reduced capillary fill times
  • Pallor on elevation and rubor on dependency

5
Patient presents with Critical Limb Ischemia-
What do we do next?
We know our complex patients can have multiple
comorbidities with similar and often overlapping
signs symptoms Are we looking for all
contributing factors?
6
Foot Care and P.A.D.
  • Preventative foot care
  • Daily foot inspection
  • Skin cleansing and moisturizing
  • Appropriate footwear
  • Promptly address skin lesions and ulcers
  • Podiatric care
  • To reduce the risk of ulcers, infection,
    necrosis, and amputation, high-risk patients
    should
  • Perform proper foot care
  • Receive annual foot exams

7
Classical Diabetic Triad of Pathology
PVD
Infection
Neuropathy
8
Diabetic Foot and P.A.D.
  • Diabetic foot ulcers
  • 15-25 of persons with diabetes develop a foot
    ulcer
  • 14-24 of persons with a foot ulcer require
    amputation
  • Foot ulcers precede 85 of non-traumatic
    amputations
  • About 50 of all foot ulcers are due to P.A.D.
  • Peripheral neuropathy can accompany P.A.D. in
    patients with diabetes and lead to
  • Decreased pain perception
  • Sudden ulcer formation

9
Multidisciplinary Care of the Diabetic Foot
  • A joint statement from the Society for Vascular
    Surgery (SVS) and the American Podiatric Medical
    Association (APMA) specifies that diabetic foot
    care requires
  • Vascular assessment and revascularization, if
    necessary
  • Wound assessment and staging/grading of ischemia
    and infection
  • Risk monitoring and reduction for reulceration
    and infection

10
Limb Ischemia and the Diabetic Foot
  • Critical limb ischemia (CLI) in the diabetic
    population requires multidisciplinary care
  • Ischemia is one of many factors underlying
    diabetic foot disease, and leads to
  • Decreased tissue resilience
  • Impeded wound healing
  • Rapid tissue necrosis
  • Left untreated, CLI results in non-healing wounds
    and potential amputation

11
Classical Diabetic Foot Treatment Plan
Stop Smoking Exercise
Achieve Ideal Body Weight Control
Blood Pressure Control Diabetes
Antiplatelet Therapy
Off-Loading Debridement
Infection Management Ischemia
Management Control Cholesterol and
Triglycerides
12
Wound Care and P.A.D.
  • P.A.D. is associated with ulcers that heal slowly
    or not at all
  • Ulcer management
  • Local wound care/debridement
  • Infection control
  • Offloading
  • Revascularization
  • Limb salvage procedures
  • Healing requires increasing perfusion beyond the
    level required for healthy skin

P.A.D. and infection lead to a 90 times higher
risk of amputation
13
Guidelines on Wound Care
  • A consensus panel on treating neuropathic
    diabetic foot ulcers recommends
  • Vascular evaluation
  • Palpate pulses and take ABI and/or TBI
  • If P.A.D. is suspected, refer for segmental
    pressure volume, skin perfusion pressure (SPP),
    and transcutaneous oxygen (TCPO2) measurements
  • If revascularization is considered, refer for
    vascular consult and angiography

14
Guidelines on Wound Care
  • Consensus recommendations include P.A.D.
    management for the treatment of diabetic foot
    ulcers
  • As part of P.A.D. management, endovascular
    revascularization is being used increasingly in
  • Ulcer healing
  • Below-the-knee P.A.D.
  • Small vessels
  • Revascularization is central to wound care and
    contributes to healing in 90 of patients that
    receive it expeditiously

15
Vascular Medical Specialists have long believed
in the importance of treating the Whole patient
and not just the Hole in the patient
16
Early Detection of P.A.D. and Disease Outcomes
The major goals of early detection are to slow or
stop P.A.D. progression to the more advanced
stages AND to reduce cardiovascular morbidity and
mortality
17
CLI is a Marker for Death
  • Within three months of presentation CLI
  • Death in 9
  • MI in 1
  • Stroke in 1
  • Amputation in 12
  • 1-year Mortality 21.0
  • 2-year mortality 31.6

18
A Big Problem Lesion Assessment
  • Less than half of the patients that eventually
    received a PRIMARY amputation (49) had any
    diagnostic evaluation prior to their amputation!
  • Not even a simple ABI

Must go beyond PAD Assessments
  • Vascular history
  • Physical Examination
  • Non-invasive vascular laboratory
  • Access pulses
  • Arteriography

19
Appropriate Route for Limb Salvage
  • ABI
  • Arterial Duplex Scanning
  • Venous Duplex Scanning with appropriate
    technologist

DPM Gatekeeper
  • Contrast Angiography
  • Endovascular intervention
  • RF Closure
  • Surgical Bypass
  • Amputation only if needed

Endovascular Interventionalists
20
Podiatry and P.A.D.
  • Case Study
  • Patient presented with a foot ulcer
  • Podiatrist prescribed antibiotics and requested a
    2-week follow-up
  • At follow-up, patient was referred for a vascular
    consult 17 days later
  • Prior to consult, patient developed a necrotic
    foot
  • Below-the-knee amputation was performed one month
    after consult
  • Jury awarded patient 1.23 million for not
    receiving a prompt vascular referral

Medical-legally, we also find ourselves in the
position where recognition of P.A.D. and
pro-active intervention will not only be
expected, but also necessary for better risk
management.
21
Prognosis Economic Impact of CLI
  • Critical Limb Ischemia (CLI) is defined as
    extremity pain at rest or as impending tissue
    loss that is caused by a severe compromise of
    blood flow.
  • DX of CLI should be confirmed by ankle-brachial
    index (ABI)
  • Ischemic rest pain most commonly occurs below an
    ankle pressure of 50mm HG or a toe pressure less
    than 30 mm Revascularization is central to wound
    care and contributes to healing in 90 of
    patients that receive it expeditiously

22
P.A.D. Evaluation
  • P.A.D Patients
  • 80 are current or former smokers
  • Diabetes is associated with a 21 risk of
    amputation as compared with 3 in nondiabetic
    patients
  • Traditional cardiovascular risk factors also play
    a lesser role males, age, black race,
    hypertension.

Remarkably a recent study showed that only 35
of patients undergoing limb amputation in the
U.S. had an ABI documented and only 16 of
amputees underwent peripheral angiography
23
Clinical Presentation P.A.D.
  • Physical Examination
  • Dry skin, thickened nails, loss of hair.
  • Coolness to palpation
  • Decreased or absent pulses
  • Pallor or dependent rubor
  • Nonhealing wound or ulcer, especially over bony
    prominences, and on the plantar surface of the

24
Clinical Presentation P.A.D.
  • Noninvasive Vascular Laboratory
  • Ankle-Brachial index lt 0.4 or gt 1.3
  • Ankle systolic pressure lt 50 mm Hg
  • Toe systolic pressure lt 30 mm Hg
  • Transcutaneous oxygen tension lt 10 mm HG

25
CLI Rule of ¼
  • For patients with Critical Limb Ischemia, after
    one year
  • ¼ Resolution
  • ¼ Ongoing
  • ¼ Require amputation
  • ¼ Dead

One-year CLI outcomes could approximate the
following one-fourth rule..
26
Be a Proactive Part of the Solution
  • A program to promote
  • Early identification and diagnosis of CLI by
    podiatrists
  • Followed by prompt referral to endovascular
    specialists in your patients communities
  • Completed by aggressive wound care and
    surveillance programs by the health care partners

27
LE Amputation
  • Impact
  • Devastating psychological and quality of life
    issues
  • Survival Perioperative mortality BKA 5-10
    AKA 15-20
  • Second amputation required in 30 of cases.
  • Full mobility achieved in 50 of BKA 25 of AKA

28
LE Amputation
  • Impact
  • It is estimated that between 220,000 and 240,000
    major and minor lower extremity amputations are
    performed for CLI in the US and Europe annually

Charleston West Virginia, Population 240K
29
LE Amputation
  • LE Amputation Rate
  • Despite advances in medical and interventional
    therapies, the amputation rate has increased from
    19 to 30 per 100,000 person/year over the past 2
    decades
  • Mainly driven by an increase in diabetes and
    aging patient populations

30
LE Amputation
  • Success of Rehabilitation
  • Below Knee Amputation (BKA) less than two thirds
  • Above Knee Amputation (AKA) less than one half
  • Fewer than 50 of amputees ever achieve full
    mobility

31
CLI Economic Impact
  • Expenses, difficult to assess in
    cost-effectiveness analysis
  • Home Health Aids
  • Construction adaptation of home
  • Influence on family
  • Productivity economics
  • Long-term health care costs

32
CLI Economic Impact- First Line Treatment
  • Recent cost-effectiveness analysis of US Medicare
    patients First line treatment
  • 67 Primary Amputation
  • 23 Surgical Revascularization
  • 10 Percutaneous Revascularization
  • Amputation seems to be over utilized despite
    being associated with worse patient outcome.

33
CLI Economic ImpactSurgical Revascularization
  • Surgical revascularization for limb salvage
  • 34 increase in 5-year survival
  • Primary amputation three times more costly than
    surgical revascularization in both diabetic and
    non diabetic patients
  • Percutaneous revascularization offers 30-50
    improved cost per procedure cost and cost per leg
    year saved

34
Contrast Angiography
  • Identifies the level of arterial disease such
    that endovascular and/or surgical interventions
    can be planned appropriately
  • Endovascular therapy, such as atherectomy,
    angioplasty, and/or stenting, can be performed
    during contrast angiography, if warranted.

35
Endovascular Therapy- PTA
  • Percutaneous Transluminal Angioplasty (PTA)
  • Is the initial therapy of choice for CLI in
    patients who are candidates for either surgery or
    endovascular therapy
  • Avoids the additional morbidity associated with
    vascular surgery
  • Does not preclude the possibility of subsequent
    surgery

36
Bypass Versus Angioplasty in Severe Ischemia of
the Leg
BASIL (2005) study of 452 patients Shows that
endovascular therapy and surgery were comparable
as first-line therapies for CLI but that PTA was
less expensive and did not preclude subsequent
treatment with surgery
37
Infrapopliteal PTA
  • Two recent trials have shown the efficacy and
    attractiveness of an initial percutaneous
    approach for patients with CLI and infrapopliteal
    vascular disease
  • 90 limb salvage after 2-5 years
  • Suggests angioplasty of the tib-peroneal trunk
    should not be reserved just for limb-salvage

38
Endovascular Therapy
  • Atherectomy
  • A minimally invasive technique for removing
    atherosclerosis from a blood vessel
  • The advantage of atherectomy over angioplasty is
    that it removes plaque. It reduces the amount
    of barotrauma on the vessel wall.

39
Vascular Surgery, Podiatric Medicine Primary
Care practices are loaded with Chronic Venous
Insufficiency among the Patients we serve
Vascular diseases of the periphery can be the
marker for overall cardiovascular events
involving the coronary, renal and cerebral
arteries, as well as the superficial venous system
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