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  Vol. 137 No. 5, May 2002 TABLE OF CONTENTS
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Blunt Lower-Extremity Trauma and Popliteal Artery Injuries

Revisiting the Case for Selective Arteriography

Hatem Abou-Sayed, MD; David L. Berger, MD

Arch Surg. 2002;137:585-589.

Hypothesis  Abandoning mandatory angiography in patients with blunt lower-extremity trauma and normal neurovascular examination results does not affect limb salvage.

Design  Retrospective, nonrandomized cohort study. Mean follow-up (31 of 52 patients) of 9.5 months (range, 0-96 months).

Setting  Single-institution, academic level I trauma center.

Patients  Medical records of patients presenting emergently with knee dislocation, distal femoral fractures, or proximal tibial fractures during a 20-year period were reviewed. Fifty-three injuries occurred in 52 patients. Patients were predominantly male (81%) and young (mean age, 32.7 years). Mechanisms and side of extremity injury, coincident injuries, and neurovascular status on admission were recorded. Hard signs of arterial insufficiency or compartment syndrome were identified.

Interventions  Angiographic findings and operative and nonoperative interventions were recorded to identify whether angiographic data would alter therapy dictated by clinical findings alone.

Main Outcome Measures  Limb salvage rate and necessity for vascular surgical intervention based on angiographic data in patients with normal neurovascular examination results.

Results  Multiorgan trauma occurred in 11 patients. Pulses were normal in 35, absent in 16, and diminished or identified by Doppler signal in 2. Arterial insufficiency or compartment syndrome was present in 29%. Twenty-seven patients (28 limbs) underwent angiography at the discretion of the attending surgeon. Of 13 abnormal arteriograms, 2 occurred in patients with normal pulses and 11 in patients with abnormal examination results. Thirteen of 36 patients with normal pulses underwent angiography; none had clinically significant arterial injuries that necessitated intervention. No vascular interventions were necessary in 23 patients with normal pulses who did not undergo angiography (P<.001). Normal neurovascular status bore a 100% negative predictive value in determining the necessity of vascular intervention.

Conclusions  Angiography is unnecessary in the routine evaluation of the patient with blunt lower-extremity trauma who presents with a normal neurovascular examination result and can be used selectively for patients with diminished pulses who lack associated indications for mandatory operative exploration.


From General Surgical Services, Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston. Dr Abou-Sayed is now affiliated with the Department of Plastic Surgery, University of California at San Francisco.



THIS ARTICLE HAS BEEN CITED BY OTHER ARTICLES

Traumatic Arterial Injuries of the Extremities: Initial Evaluation with MDCT Angiography.
Rieger et al.
Am. J. Roentgenol. 2006;186:656-664.
ABSTRACT | FULL TEXT  

Peripheral Vascular Trauma
Compton and Rhee
PERSPECT VASC SURG ENDOVASC THER 2005;17:297-307.
ABSTRACT  

Surgical Management of Knee Dislocations
Chhabra et al.
JBJS 2005;87:1-21.
ABSTRACT | FULL TEXT  

Vascular Injuries in Knee Dislocations: The Role of Physical Examination in Determining the Need for Arteriography
Stannard et al.
JBJS 2004;86:910-915.
ABSTRACT | FULL TEXT  





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