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Perspectives in Circulation Today
Problem Areas in Wound Healing...What do we know or do about the following problems? What do they have in common?
- "Critical Colonization" (Kingsley 2003) vs "Clinical Infection" and >100,000 organisms
- Failure to heal with bacterial count >100,000
- Poor penetration of antibiotics into granulation and/or scar tissue (Robson 1974)
- Intracellular foci of bacteria where less susceptible to antibiotics and granulocytes:
- Osteoblasts (Ahmed 2001), Ellington (2003)
- Keratinocytes (Mempel 2002), von Eiff (2001)
- Bovine endothelial cells (Vann 1987), (Hamill 1986)
- Escape from endosomes to cytoplasm (Shompole 2003)
Post Revascularization and Microcirculation Problems
- Revascularization edema
- Ischemic reperfusion injury (Bolli 1999, Heyndrickx 2006, Movahed 2008)
- Myocardial stunning
- Tissue hibernation
- No flow
- Cholesterol emboli
Documentation and Value of Vascular Tests of Small Vessel Disease
- Toe
pressures and toe/arm index: Toe pressures may be abnormally low in
patients with palpable pulses and neuropathic ulcers (Stevens 1993).
Low toe pressures and toe/arm index significantly more common among
diabetics than a low ABI (Sahli 2004).
- Abnormal
Laser Doppler results early in the course of neuropathic diabetics
(Walewski 1997) and diabetics without overt complications (Karnafel
2002). The best locations for perfusion measurement are the most
distal, especially the hallex and the base of the little toe. The most
valuable parameters of postocclusive hyperemia were maximum response,
time to peak flow, and half-time of hyperemia.
- Transcutaneous
PO2: Preoperative TcPO2 <=22 and foot/chest <=0.46 indicate
severe ischemia requiring bypass (These folks do not have a boot).
Postoperative TcPO2 <=22 and foot/chest <= 0.53 indicate
revascularization likely to fail (Lalka 1988).
- Transcutaneous PO2 may be very low in the infected foot and rise appreciably after the infection is controlled (Pinzur 1993).
- When
therapeutic measures to improve the circulation are limited to vascular
procedures, microvascular evaluations add no clinical benefit over
standard macrovascular tests (Lawall 2000).
- Laser
Doppler fluxmetry: preoperative prediction of wound healing of 91.4%,
and a predictive value for wound failure of 89% (Mars 1998).
- The measurement of intracompartmental pressure and tissue oxygen saturation as a guide to need for fasciotomy (Arato 2007).
Common Features and Comments
Failure
to heal may result from all of the above: infection difficult to
eradicate, persistent postoperative ischemia and unappreciated small
vessel disease. The ability of Staphylococcus to hide
within the cells, to subsequently kill cells and to emerge into the
extracellular fluid to continue a cellulitic process is one factor
leading to failure of standard intravenous therapies used to cure
osteomyelitis and sepsis. The local injection of antibiotics may
increase the local concentration of antibiotic well above the levels
achieved by the oral or intravenous routes. And the increased local
concentration increases the extracellular/intracellular gradient and
the likelihood that a bacteriocidal concentration will be achieved
within the cell. Locally injected antibiotics, however, may merely pool
in the tissues and exit with other drainage. Circulator Boot therapy
after the injections does successfully help disseminate the antibiotic
throughout the tissues. Dillon reported successful cures of
osteomyelitis in 43 consecutive cases (1990). Niezgoda recently
reported his success with the same techniques (2008). The combination
of a very low TcPO2 and pulsatile flow as documented with a PPG probe
(photoelectricplethsmographic probe) may be pathognomonic of a
necrotiizing cellulitis. Such findings may constitute a "boot
emergency"; the injection of antibiotics into such tissue followed by
boot therapy may raise the TcPO2 to acceptable levels within a few
hours and prevent tissue breakdown. Among
approved indications for Circulator Boot therapy, the Food and Drug
Administration initially approved therapy to increase pre-operative
runoff and/or post-operative runoff. Indeed, the concept of improving
the visualization of runoff vessels by pneumatic boot therapy prior to
the performance of an angiogram was introduced 32 years ago by D'Souza
(1976). Dillon reported the significant improvements in ankle blood
pressures, arm/ankle indices, Doppler waveform amplitudes, pulse volume
measurements (oscillometry indices) and subcutaneous PO2 levels 28
years ago. Many of the case histories on the Circulator Boot website
include such vascular data. More recently Gruenes et al (2005) reported
that blood flow measured by their Laser Doppler increased in all of
their patients by an average of 43%. Williams
utilized the Circulator Boot to treat patients with chronic limb
ischemia and patients with leg ulcers associated with combined venous
and arterial disease (2008, 2008). In the former he documented
significant rises in transcutaneous PO2 levels and in the latter, he
healed recalcitrant ulcers. A
tense swollen painful leg in the postoperative period may be associated
with the compartment syndrome. Tissue pressure oxygen measurements may
indicate need for a fasciotomy.... but Boot therapy is easier and does
not result in a new wound to heal. If a fasciotomy is done, Boot
therapy may be useful in closing the wound (Case182)(Case 183). What do the above have in common? They all may be associated with indications for therapy with the Circulator Boot. (Abstracts of all of the authors listed above are found in our website libraries (Literature Menu). |
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