Peroneal bypass is equivalent to inframalleolar bypass for ischemic pedal gangrene

Ahmed M. Abou-Zamzam, Gregory L. Moneta, Raymond W. Lee, Mark R. Nehler, Lloyd M. Taylor, John M. Porter

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Objective: To determine if peroneal bypass is a suitable alternative to inframalleolar bypass in patients with ischemic pedal gangrene. Design: Review era prospectively acquired vascular registry. Setting: University practice limited to vascular surgery. Patients: Patients with chronic lower- extremity ischemia and pedal gangrene evaluated between 1985 and 1995 in whom the only options for arterial reconstruction were bypass to the peroneal or an inframalleolar artery.Interventions: Peroneal or inframalleolar reverse vein bypass. Main Outcome Measures: Time to healing and life-table analyses of survival, primary patency, and limb salvage. Results: Eighty-three peroneal and 46 pedal bypasses were performed for ischemic foot gangrene. The groups were equivalent for sex, diabetes mellitus, heart disease, hypertension, renal failure, hypercoagulable states, previous ipsilateral bypass, smoking, and preoperative ankle- brachial indices. Patients with inframalleolar bypass were younger than patients with peroneal bypass (63.9 vs 71.6 years, P = .005) and had higher postoperative ankle-brachial indices (1.02 vs 0.91, P=.004). However, 3- year survival rates (69.1% inframalleolar vs 60.0% peroneal, P=.35), limb salvage rates at 2 years (70.3% vs 85.8%, P=.10), and time to wound healing (19.7 vs 21.6 weeks, P=.66) were equivalent. Conclusion: Peroneal and inframalleolar bypass for ischemic pedal gangrene have equivalent intermediate-term survival, limb salvage, and wound healing. Surgeons should not feel obliged to perform inframalleolar bypass for pedal gangrene if peroneal bypass is possible.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)894-899
Number of pages6
JournalArchives of Surgery
Volume131
Issue number8
DOIs
StatePublished - Aug 1996

ASJC Scopus Subject Areas

  • Surgery

Cite this