Kondo Yuka, Nishibe Masayasu, Nishibe Toshiya, Watanabe Toru, Hoshino Ryo, Hattori Koji, Yamashita Mitsuru, Takagi Yasushi, Ando Motomi, Shimizu Kazuyoshi
Japanese Journal of Vascular Surgery, 16(2) 49-54, 2007
Background: Infrainguinal angioplasty provides a minimally invasive alternative to bypass surgery in patients with severe limb ischemia in whom surgery involves a high risk. This study aimed to evaluate early patency, limb salvage effect, and initial technical success rates in patients who underwent infrainguinal angioplasty.Patients and Methods: A total of 29 patients (37 limbs) who presented with severe claudication, rest pain, ulcer, gangrene, or a combination of these conditions were treated with infrainguinal angioplasty between February 2005 and September 2006. Angioplasty was performed using appropriately sized balloons or stents, or both. Intraluminal self expanding stents were used in cases of the superficial femoral artery and were not used in the infrapopliteal, tibial, and peroneal arteries.Results: The primary success rates were 100% for superficial femoral artery stenting and infrapopliteal artery balloon angioplasty. The 3-month primary patency rate, primary assisted patency rate, limb salvage rate, and survival rate were 94%, 100%, 96% and 100% for superficial femoral artery stenting, and 89%, 89%, 100% and 86% for infrapopliteal artery balloon angioplasty as estimated by Kaplan-Meier analysis.Conclusions: Infrainguinal angioplasty is a feasible primary treatment of critical limb ischemia in high-risk patients, providing excellent technical success and acceptable patency and limb salvage rates, comparable with surgical bypass surgery.