Foot reconstruction, including ulcers Flashcards
what is the ABI?
- o ABI = comparison of systolic occlusion pressure of the brachial artery to the a) dorsalis pedis and b) posterior tibial occlusion pressure
o ≥ 1.0 = normal
o ≥ 0.7-1 = mild, RF mod, ± antiplatelet agent
o 0.5-0.7 = mod, as above + ref to vasc sx, ± imaging
o ≤0.50 = severe; as above + urgent ref to vasc sx
o ≤ 0.3 or ankle sBP <50mmHg = critical ischemia, urgent ref to vascular on-call
o extensive atherosclerosis leads to medial calcification and falsely elevated ABIs
compare arterial, venous and diabetic ulcers
Arterial
Venous
Diabetic
Pathophysiology
Progressive atheroschlerosis
Valvular incompetence
Previous DVT / post-thrombotic syndrome
Neuropathy & autonomic dysfunction & micro/macrovascular
Risk factors
Age, DM, smoking
Obesity, VTE, varicosities
Occult trauma
Poorly fitting / inadequate foot-wear
Charcot changes
History - symptoms
Painful, pain w elevation
Claudication
Less painful, discomfort w/ dependence, as day progresses
Polyneuropathy
Location
Foot / shoe / lat malleolus
“Gaitor” esp med malleolus
Pressure areas
Appearance
Punched out, defined margins
Pale, dry
Shallow, irregular margins
Ruddy/fibrin/granulation, wet
Callous over undermined wound +/- penetration to bone
Charcot changes
Associated findings
Thin, cool, hairless
Diminished/absent pulses
Inverted champagne
Hemosiderin deposition
Signs of infection (cellulitis, purulence, wet/dry gangrene)
+/- vascular insufficiency
ABI, other Ix
Bedside Doppler
ABI +/- toe digital pressure
à ABI < 0.7 abn; < 0.5 ischemia; < 0.3 = critical
TcO2
Duplex Doppler best test
Usually normal
HbA1c
Still Doppler/vascular studies
Treatment Principles
Medical: Pentoxifylline, ASA
Vasc Sx assess if ABI < 0.7
Debridement unlikely to be of benefit if ABI < 0.7
Consider HBO consult
Leg elevation
Activity
Compression stockings (ABI > 0.8 for high graduated comp’n)
Sx tx of superficial veins
Glucose control
Podiatry: shoes, foot care, avoidance of trauma & pressure
Aggressive tx of infection (oral / IV abx) and surgical debridement if req’d
what is phlegmasia cerulea dolens?
- Acute fulminating form of DVT commonly w/ trauma/cancer
- Massive increase in pressure in hours with massive edema (6-10L) –> art insuff –> agonizing pain
- Investigations – rule out compartment syndrome
- Treatment – elevation, heme/vasc consult urgently
describe the pathophysiologic mechanisms of wounds/ulcers in DM
- Vascular:
- Occlusive macroangiopathy – usually tibial/peroneal
- Nonocclussive microangiopathy – changes in bld visc (HbA1c + RBC); thickened BM –> ↓WBC migration; ↓ cap vasodilation
- Polyneuropathy and microtrauma (primary mechanism)
- 2ary to elevated intraneural concentration of sorbital
- nerve swelling and compression
- decreased repair/regeneration of nerves
- altered vasoactive substances (NO)
- oxidative stress
- AGE - advanced glycosylated end-products - causes microvascular insult to nerves
- Hyperglycemia and decreased ability to fight infection / increased susceptibility to infection
- Decreased stem cells and stem cell pluripotency diminishes wound healing capability
list options available to reconstruction of foot wounds
- secondary intention +/- w/ adjuncts like VAC, HBO
- STSG/FTSG with healthy wound bed, no tendon w/o paratenon, non-weight bearing
- local random flaps (V-Y, filet)
- pedicle regional flaps
- propellor flaps
- free flaps
- combination
Options for achilles tendon, ankle, foot dorsum
- extensor digitorum brevis muscle flap
- lateral supramalleolar flap
- reverse sural artery fasciocutaneous flap (for ankle & achilles)
- propellor
Options for plantar forefoot
- Neurovascular island flap from fibular side of great toe
- Toe fillet flap s/p ray amputation
- V-Y flap, opposing V-Y advancement flaps
- Utilizing viable plantar +/- dorsal +/- toe fillet flaps for transmetatarsal forefoot amputation
Options for plantar mid-foot
o Local flaps: V-Y,ying-yang, O to T
o STSG to arch; thick STSG or FTSG of glaborous skin from arch to weight bearing surface and STSG to resurface arch
o Neurovascular island flaps with more proximal dissection of neurovascular bundle
- Midfoot amputation
Options for plantar hindfoot
- abductor hallucus muscle flap (medial plantar artery)
- Reverse sural artery fasciocutaenous flap
- Medial plantar artery neurotized fasciocutaneous flap (from post-tib)
- Lateral calcaneal artery (terminal branch of peroneal a)
- Propellor
- Free flap
when would you consider free flap for FOOT reconstruction?
- Large hindfoot wounds (>6 cm)
- defects in patients devoid of the posterior tibial vessels (from either trauma or disease)
- patients who have been revascularized to the distal anterior tibial/dorsalis pedis artery via bypass grafts
- consider thin/thick; functioning muscle