Fig 1: Intractable ulcer on the right sole.
Following diagnosis of distal foot ischemia due to proximal segmental occlusion of the dorsalis pedis artery, a peroneal-dorsalis pedis arterial short bypass using an in-situ saphenous vein graft was performed. Intraoperative ultrasound Doppler graft flow examination showed an initial graft flow of 11 ml/min, increasing to 22 ml/min after two intraarterial bolus administrations of 5 µg prostaglandin E1 (20 µg PGE1/20 cc normal saline) through a side-branch of the vein graft.
The patient's pain disappeared immediately after surgery. The healing process was slow, probably due to still high levels of fibrinogen and HbA1c, at 906 mg/dl and 7.8% respectively, but the ulcer on the distal sole healed completely after 8 weeks. The toe-systemic pressure index improved to 0.70 while postoperative digital subtraction angiography revealed a well-functioning bypass graft (Fig. 3).
The distinguishing feature of the present case was that, unlike the majority of the cases with diabetic atherosclerosis, plantar and pedal arteries were involved in the atherosclerotic lesion. Although a microcirculatory disorder due to an elevated level of HbA1c should also be considered, owing to the presence of a non-healing ulcer and an intractable foot pain as well as the significantly reduced toe-ankle pressure index, we decided to perform bypass to the dorsalis pedis artery distal to the segmental occlusion.
The peroneal artery was selected as the inflow site for revascularization due to its superior quality as well as the well-documented durability of peroneal bypasses.[4] The minimum flow requirement for providing long-term patency of the vein graft remains unclear; however, intragraft infusion of PGE1 is effective in increasing and retaining graft flow at a sufficient level in cases with poor run-off distal arteries. Following this outcome, we also believe that distal origin short vein bypass grafting is a very promising procedure in diabetic patients.[5]
The healing of the ulcer in the present case justifies an aggressive bypass strategy for patients with intractable ischemic ulcers associated with occlusion of the main feeding artery into the foot.
1) LoGerfo FW, Coffman JD. Current concepts. Vascular and microvascular disease of the foot in diabetes. Implications for foot care. N Engl J Med 1984;311:1615-9.
2) Pomposelli FB Jr, Marcaccio EJ, Gibbons GW, Campbell DR, Freeman DV, Burgess AM, et al. Dorsalis pedis arterial bypass: durable limb salvage for foot ischemia in patients with diabetes mellitus. J Vasc Surg 1995;21:375-84.
3) Neufang A, Dorweiler B, Espinola-Klein C, Reinstadler J, Kraus O, Schmiedt W, et al. Limb salvage in diabetic foot syndrome with pedal bypass using the in-situ technique. Zentralbl Chir 2003;128:715-9. [Abstract]
4) Best IM. Peroneal-plantar artery bypass: a prone approach. J Vasc Surg 2003;37:469-71.