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J.Jpn. Surg. Soc.. 90(4): 615-621, 1989


Original article

THE PROGNOSIS OF INTERMITTENT CLAUDICATION

Second Department of Surgery, Aichi Medical University, Aichi, Japan
*) First Department of Surgery, Nagoya University School of Medicine, Nagoya, Japan

Takashi Ohta, Ryohei Kato, Hideki Kazui, Mitsutaka Kondo, Hiromichi Tsuchioka, Shigehiko Shionoya*)

The purpose of this study is to obtain the informations about the fate of the limbs and lives of claudicants due to arteriosclerosis obliterans. Two hundred and seven lower limbs of 165 patients suffering from intermittent claudication were observed for an avarage period of about six years. Eighty-seven limbs of 69 patients were managed nonsurgically (Group A). Ninety-eight percent of limbs in Group A remained unchanged or improved, and no limb was amputated. One hundred and twenty limbs of 96 patients had arterial reconstructins (Group B). Although 75 percent of limbs in Group B had benefits by successful operations, 26 percent of them experienced graft failures, and 2.7 percent of them were amputated. Five year graft patency rates in the limbs with supra-and infra-inguinal reconstructions were 82.1percent and 65.7 percent, respectively. Operative mortality rate was 2.1 percent, and mortality rate due to late complicatins was 3.3 percent. The prognosis of intermittent claudication with regular follow-up was relatively good, therefore, it is important ot recognize that arterial reconstruction is not the only way to treat limbs with mild intermittent claudication. About 30 percent of claudicants died within 5 years, and 60 percent of them died from cardiac or cerebrovascular disease. The results suggested that much attention should be paid to the lives as well as the limbs of claudicants.


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