The aim of this study is to determine risk factors associated with failure of limb salvage in patients with periphral arterial injuries with or without attempts of revascularization.
Trauma to the vascular system can be devastating. Peripheral arterial traumatic injuries rarely occur in isolation, often complicated by bone fractures and nerve injuries. As a result of these complex injury patterns, vascular extremity trauma presents unique challenges to injury management and is associated with significant morbidity. In all trauma- related injuries , trauma is now the third leading cause of death and number one cause of death in people between the ages of 1 and 44 years . Vascular injuries comprise 3% of all civilian trauma and have significant potential morbidity. Leg trauma is common. However, it is associated with a significant vascular injury.The high energy of crushing trauma can cause extensive tissue damage with detrimental outcome such as high morbidity and mortality.\[3\] Management of associated life-threatening injuries takes priority which might lead to delay in definitive vascular repairs with subsequent limb loss.The most important risk factor for early limb loss is failed revascularization which is time dependent
Study Type
OBSERVATIONAL
Enrollment
200
Arterial repair starting from simple repair or vein graft or synthetic graft
Assiut university hospital
Asyut, Egypt
The primary outcome measure will be : technical success of the surgical intervention to control the bleeding and maintain vascularity of the affected limb (2) predictors of limb salvage.
Time frame: From January 2021 to December 2025
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