Syme's two-stage amputation in insulin-requiring diabetics with gangrene of the forefoot.
Mots clés
Abstrait
Thirty-five insulin-requiring adult diabetic patients underwent 38 Syme's Two-Stage amputations for gangrene of the forefoot with nonreconstructible peripheral vascular insufficiency. All had a minimum Doppler ischemic index of 0.5, serum albumin of 3.0 gm/dl, and total lymphocyte count of 1500. Thirty-one (81.6%) eventually healed and were uneventfully fit with a prosthesis. Regional anesthesia was used in all of the patients, with 22 spinal and 16 ankle block anesthetics. Twenty-seven (71%) returned to their preamputation level of ambulatory function. Six (16%) had major, and fifteen (39%) minor complications following the first stage surgery. The results of this study support the use of the Syme's Two-Stage amputation in adult diabetic patients with gangrene of the forefoot requiring amputation.