Vintage Technique in Vascular Surgery: Lumbar sympathectomy in critical limb ischemia

Abstract Introduction: Tromboangiitis Obliterans or Buerguer's disease is one of the expresions of the peripheral arterial disease; its main feauture is the absence of average distal outflow that precludes direct revascularization surgery; lumbar sympathectomy was carried out to treat this...

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Veröffentlicht in:Angiologia e cirurgia vascular (Sociedade Portuguesa de Angiologia e Cirurgia Vascular) 2021-06, Vol.17 (1), p.47-50
Hauptverfasser: Mariño, José Luis Durán, Gallego, Eva Lucía Martínez, Carballo, Eva Pérez, Arias, Francisco Javier Rielo, Holguín, Juan Pena, Castañeda, Laura Velásquez
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Sprache:por
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Zusammenfassung:Abstract Introduction: Tromboangiitis Obliterans or Buerguer's disease is one of the expresions of the peripheral arterial disease; its main feauture is the absence of average distal outflow that precludes direct revascularization surgery; lumbar sympathectomy was carried out to treat this condition with acceptable results but nowadays this technique is described as obsolete; many young vascular surgeons have not even heard about it and most of them have never seen a lumbar sympathectomy for the treatment of patients with critical limb ischemia. Case report: A 39-year-old woman admitted with critical limb ischemia due to popliteal artery occlusion without average distal outflow, treated by a lumbar sympathectomy as a resource technique. Discussion: Today, endovascular treatment is the first option for the critical limb ischemia in most cases; althoug tromboangiitis obliterans is less frequent nowadays, exists, and this is one of the situations where endovascular treatment does not work; what's more, direct surgery is also not possible. Conclusions: Lumbar sympathectomy can work not only in this scenary of Buerguer's disease; it can be used as resource technique when the first approach with direct surgery has failed and there is not more options to limb salvage; thus, lumbar sympathectomy should be part of the therapeutic arsenal of any vascular surgeon.
ISSN:1646-706X
2183-0096
DOI:10.48750/acv.394