Morbidity and mortality in acute lower-limb ischaemia: A 5-year review
1989
A series of 204 consecutive patients with acute lower limb ischaemia was treated over a 5-year period in a Regional Vascular Unit. The mean age was 70 years, with a range of 41–98 and a female to male ratio of 1: 0.94. Eighty-eight percent were treated by operation. Twenty-one had simultaneous vascular reconstructive procedures. Fifty-three patients died within 30 days (mortality rate 26%), and 12 required major amputation. Of these, four died resulting in a limb salvage rate of 95% in the survivors. An analysis of factors affecting outcome has shown increasing age, level of occlusion, recent myocardial infarction, pre-existing peripheral arterial disease and cardiopulmonary functional class to be major determinants of morbidity and mortality.
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