Managing Conditions Resulting from Untreated Cardiometabolic Syndrome

Similar documents
John E. Campbell, MD Assistant Professor of Surgery and Medicine Department of Vascular Surgery West Virginia University, Charleston Division

PAD and CRITICAL LIMB ISCHEMIA: EVALUATION AND TREATMENT 2014

Peripheral Vascular Disease

Disclosures. Talking Points. An initial strategy of open bypass is better for some CLI patients, and we can define who they are

Stratifying Management Options for Patients with Critical Limb Ischemia: When Should Open Surgery Be the Initial Option for CLI?

Critical Limb Ischemia A Collaborative Approach to Patient Care. Christopher LeSar, MD Vascular Institute of Chattanooga July 28, 2017

Current Status of Endovascular Therapies for Critical Limb Ischemia

Limb Salvage in Diabetic Ischemic Foot. Kritaya Kritayakirana, MD, FACS Assistant Professor Chulalongkorn University April 30, 2017

Device Evolution. Atherectomy: Where Do We Stand After 12 Years Since FDA Clearance. Where Do We Stand? 4/18/2015

Imaging Strategy For Claudication

PATIENT SPECIFIC STRATEGIES IN CRITICAL LIMB ISCHEMIA. Dr. Manar Trab Consultant Vascular Surgeon European Vascular Clinic DMCC Dubai, UAE

Endovascular Is The Way To Go: Revascularize As Many Vessels As You Can

Distal By-Pass procedures can reduce limb loss

Step by step Hybrid procedures in peripheral obstructive disease. Holger Staab, MD University Hospital Leipzig, Germany Clinic for Vascular Surgery

DCB in my practice: How the evidence influences my strategy. Yang-Jin Park

Diagnosis and Endovascular Treatment of Critical Limb Ischemia: What You Need to Know S. Jay Mathews, MD, MS, FACC

Recent Advances in Peripheral Salvage

Surgery is and Remains the Gold Standard for Limb-Threatening Ischemia

Use of Laser In BTK Disease (CLI)

Recommendations for Follow-up After Vascular Surgery Arterial Procedures SVS Practice Guidelines

LIMB SALVAGE IN THE DIABETIC PATIENT

Practical Point in Holistic Diabetic Foot Care 3 March 2016

Current Vascular and Endovascular Management in Diabetic Vasculopathy

Pedal Bypass With Deep Venous Arterialization:

The Utility of Atherectomy and the Jetstream Atherectomy System

Case Discussion. Disclosures. Critical Limb Ischemia: A Selective Approach to Revascularization Works Best 4/28/2012. None. 58 yo M, DM, CAD, HTN

Disclosures. Tips and Tricks for Tibial Intervention. Tibial intervention overview

Interventional Treatment First for CLI

Practical Point in Diabetic Foot Care 3-4 July 2017

Disclosures. Objectives. Bypass vs. Endo for SFA Disease: Reaching Consensus on a Rational Approach. Christopher D. Owens, MD 4/23/2009

Management of In-stent Restenosis after Lower Extremity Endovascular Procedures

Disclosures. In-Stent Restenosis: The Tail IS Wagging the Dog 4/15/2016. Restenosis: The Continuing Challenge for Peripheral Vascular Intervention

Index. cardiology.theclinics.com. Note: Page numbers of article titles are in boldface type.

9/7/2018. Disclosures. CV and Limb Events in PAD. Challenges to Revascularization. Challenges. Answering the Challenge

Intercepting PAD. Playbook for Cardiovascular Care 2018 February 24, Jonathan D Woody, MD, FACS. University Surgical Vascular

Evidence-Based Optimal Treatment for SFA Disease

Robert W. Fincher, DO The Ritz-Carlton, Dove Mountain Marana, Arizona February 7th, 2015

Peripheral arterial disease for primary care Ed Aboian, MD

Surgical Options for revascularisation P E T E R S U B R A M A N I A M

Boca Raton Regional Hospital Grand Rounds September 13, 2016

Disclosures. Critical Limb Ischemia. Vascular Testing in the CLI Patient. Vascular Testing in Critical Limb Ischemia UCSF Vascular Symposium

Lower Extremity Peripheral Arterial Disease: Its All About the Pulse. Spence M Taylor, M.D.

Hybrid Procedures for Peripheral Obstructive Disease - Step by Step -

TurboHawk. Plaque Excision System

What s New in the Management of Peripheral Arterial Disease

2-YEAR DATA SUPERA POPLITEAL REAL WORLD

Christian Wissgott MD, PhD Assistant Director, Radiology Westküstenkliniken Heide

The ZILVERPASS study a randomized study comparing ZILVER PTX stenting with Bypass in femoropopliteal lesions

Disclosures. Rational Selection of Endovascular Options for the SFA and Popliteal: What Works Where and for How Long?

Intervention for Lower Extremity PAD: When, why and what?! Robert F Cuff, MD FACS RVT RPVI

Remote Endarterectomy Update

Garland Green, MD Interventional Cardiologist. Impact of PAD: Prevalence, Risk Factors, Testing, and Medical Management

Update from Korea on the Lutonix SFA registry 12 month data

Clinical and morphological features of patients who underwent endovascular interventions for lower extremity arterial occlusive diseases

Introduction to Peripheral Arterial Disease. Stacey Clegg, MD Interventional Cardiology August

The present status of selfexpanding. for CLI: Why and when to use. Sean P Lyden MD Cleveland Clinic Cleveland, Ohio

OCT guided procedures in peripheral intervention

Current Status and Limitations in the Treatment of Femoropopliteal In-Stent Restenosis

Interventional Radiology in Peripheral Vascular Disease: How Far Can We Go? Dr. L. F. CHENG Department of Radiology Princess Margaret Hospital

Clinical Data Update for Drug Coated Balloons (DCB) Seung-Whan Lee, MD, PhD

The Crack and Pave technique for highly resistant calcified lesions. Manuela Matschuck MD University Hospital Leipzig Department Angiology

Turbo-Power. Laser atherectomy catheter. The standard. for ISR

Update on Tack Optimized Balloon Angioplasty (TOBA) Below the Knee. Marianne Brodmann, MD Medical University Graz Graz, Austria

Hybrid surgical treatment of bilateral aorto-femoral occlusion: a clinical case

BEST-CLI Trial Study Concept and Current Status

I am no good at debates!

Excimer Laser angioplasty for femoro-popliteal disease. Sendai Kousei Hospital, Tokyo Kamata Hospital Naoto Inoue MD, FSCAI, FJCC, FAHA

Global Vascular Guideline on the Management of Chronic Limb Threatening Ischemia -a new foundation for evidence-based care

William A. Gray MD System Chief of Cardiovascular Services, Main Line Health President, Lankenau Heart Institute Wynnewood, PA USA

Angiosome concept myth or truth? Does it make a real difference in real world cases?

BIOLUX P-III Passeo-18 Lux All-comers Registry: 12-month Results for the All-Comers Cohort

Atherectomy is Still Live and Effective. John R. Laird, MD Professor of Medicine Medical Director of the Vascular Center UC Davis Health System

Critical Limb Ischemia: Diagnosis and Current Management

The Final Triumph Of Endovascular Therapy In SFA Treatment

CLI Treatment Using Long and Scoring Balloons

The essentials for BTK procedures: wires, balloons, what else

Lower Extremity Peripheral Arterial Disease: Less is Sometimes More. Spence M Taylor, M.D.

Maximally Invasive Vascular Surgery for the Treatment of Critical Limb Ischemia

Larry Diaz, MD, FSCAI Mehdi H. Shishehbor, DO, FSCAI

Distal hybrids - an option in long SFA CTO accompanied by severely compromized crural runoff

Future Algorithm for Lower Extremity Revascularization: Where Does Vessel Prep Fit?

Endovascular Should Be Considered First Line Therapy

Comparison Of Primary Long Stenting Versus Primary Short Stenting For Long Femoropopliteal Artery Disease (PARADE)

Peripheral Arterial Disease: Who has it and what to do about it?

Role of ABI in Detecting and Quantifying Peripheral Arterial Disease

New Modalities and Advanced Techniques: The Role of Crossing Devices and Atherectomy

Endovascular revascularisation of popliteal artery occlusions: two complex cases

OCT Guided Atherectomy: Initial Results of the VISION Trial Using the Pantheris Catheter. Patrick Muck, MD

Guidelines for Management of Peripheral Arterial Disease

NCVH. What's New on the Vascular Horizons? Craig M. Walker, MD, FACC, FACP. New Cardiovascular Horizons

Treatment Strategies For Patients with Peripheral Artery Disease

Disclosures. TASC, AHA, SVS: What s Happening with the Guidelines? How Are They Relevant? Purpose of Practice Guidelines

Stents for The Common Femoral Artery: The Good, The Bad and The Ugly

Hypothesis: When compared to conventional balloon angioplasty, cryoplasty post-dilation decreases the risk of SFA nses in-stent restenosis

Objectives 10/4/2016. Percutaneous Atherectomy and Tibio-Pedal Access. The Art of Body Floss. 1. Appreciate the scope of PAD and Amputation.

CRITICAL LIMB ISCHEMIA UNITED STATES EPIDEMIOLOGY TABLE OF CONTENTS

Introduction. Risk factors of PVD 5/8/2017

Transcription:

Managing Conditions Resulting from Untreated Cardiometabolic Syndrome Matthew P. Namanny DO, FACOS Vascular/Endovascular Surgery Saguaro Surgical/AZ Vascular Specialist Tucson Medical Center

Critical Limb Ischemia Peripheral Arterial Disease (PAD) PARTNERS study, JAMA 2003

Alarming Numbers PAD is a chronic, progressive, debilitating, systemic disease ~12 million Americans have PAD Increasing by 1 million/year 50-75% of people are undiagnosed By age 70 20-30% of people suffer from PAD 150,000 amputations are done per year Treating PAD can increase quality of life, functional status and possibly reduce CV risk PARTNERS study, JAMA 2003

Risk Factors for P.A.D. Lifestyle Smoking Obesity Health conditions Diabetes Cardiovascular disease Erectile dysfunction Chronic kidney disease Hypertension Hyperlipidemia Demographics Older age Black race More than half of the attributable risk of P.A.D. is due to smoking and diabetes Licensed from Shutterstock, 2010 The information provided in this presentation was created with monetary support from ev3 Endovascular, Inc.

PAD Remains an Intractable Clinical Challenge Just 4% of all PVD patients are treated interventionally 8-10 Million U.S. PVD Patients 2.5 Million Patients Diagnosed

Continuum of Care PAD; Progressive, Non-Curable, Life Threatening Medical Management Directional Atherectomy PTA Nitinol Stenting Covered Stents/ Heavy Metal Surgical Bypass Amputation Healthy Leg McKinsey; 275 pts- 68% 1yr patency Multilevel/ CLI Zeller; 84% (de novo)/ 54% Restenosis/ ISR Definitive-??? 800 pts., multicenter BIG 4: VIVA Meta-analysis; 33% 1 Yr Patency (sfa) Resilient (Bard); 38% Absolute; 37% Durability; 72% patency, 100cm+ stents Absolute 63%, 235 pts Sabeti et al., 22/71% patency. VIABRANT; 53% BM VS. 55% VB, CA++, 9+ Resilient; 80% Tasc A/B BASIL Data; 68%-1yr patency, 452 pts. 28% complication rate.

The PAD Guideline: Treatment Algorithm PAD Detection and Screening- ABI Immediate smoking cessation Treat hypertension: JNC-7 guidelines Treat lipids: NCEP ATP III guidelines Treat diabetes mellitus: HbA 1c less than 7% Antiplatelet therapy (ACE inhibition; Class IIb, LOE CLI Determination Wound Management Infection Control, etc) Angiography, CTA, MRA, ABI-TBI, Duplex US Directional/ Rotational Atherectomy Stents PTA Covered Stents Thrombectomy, Thrombolysis Surgery Bypass Grafts -Vein -Cryo Vein -PTFE Endarterectomy Surgical Amputation Healthy Leg Medical Therapy Endovascular Therapy Surgical Therapy Amputation Integrated care requires a partnership of vascular specialists (vascular medicine, cardiology, interventional radiology, nursing, podiatry, and others)

Classification System* * Dormandy, et al. J Vasc Surg. 2000;31(suppl):S1 S296. The content of this program was developed for Covidien to be distributed to customers for training purposes only. Do not further copy or distribute.

Critical Limb Ischemia Rest pain Pain on elevation of the foot for extended period Usually occurs at night Patient may sleep in the chair Tissue loss Non-healing ulcer Gangrene Extensive gangrene with infection (wet gangrene)

CLI Rutherford 4-6 category. European Consensus Document Ischemic rest pain requiring opiate analgesia. Ankle systolic pressure<50 mm Hg. Toe pressure <30 mm Hg. Ulceration or gangrene of toes or foot.

CLI

Clinical Signs of Limb Ischemia Licensed from Custom Medical Stock Photo & Mediscan, 2010 The information provided in this presentation was created with monetary support from ev3 Endovascular, Inc.

Key Components of Therapy Control pain Treat the wound Treat infection Treat comorbid medical conditions Assess vascular supply Inflow Infrainguinal vasculature Assess revascularization options and risk

Vascular Assessment Clinical Exam Non invasive Vascular Studies- Duplex, Segmental pressures, ABI, TCOM, etc. CTA/ MRA Angiography

Inflow Vessels

Type of Therapy Endovascular Open surgical Hybrid approach (Combined open and endovascular approach)

Endoluminal Therapy Offers Less Invasive Approaches, Thereby Justifying Intervention at Earlier Stages in the Symptom/Disease Complex

Balloon it Subintimally dissect it Stent it Cover it SFA Excise it Lace it Freeze it Spin it Jet it Remote it

Which do you prefer??

TYPE OF THERAPY Intervention/Endovascular Single segment occlusion or multi-segment with favorable lesions Minimal tissue loss or rest pain Poor or no surgical options Poor targets Poor conduit or no conduit Poor surgical candidate (ESRD, CAD, Obesity)

Surgery DECIDING ON THE TYPE OF THERAPY Not having this option available will cost some patients their limb Multi-segment occlusion or multi-segment stenosis with unfavorable lesions (eccentric with heavy calcification) Poor interventional outcome or interventional failure Significant tissue loss Good surgical options Good targets Good conduit

Endovascular Access Options Antegrade/Retrograde Femoral Artery Open or percutaneous. Popliteal Artery- US guided Trans-Pedal Access (Dorsalis Pedis and Posterior Tibial) Trans-Brachial- open or percutaneous.

Retrograde DP access 21G Micropuncture needle in right DP artery 4F Micropuncture sheath + Tuohy-Borst/Co-pilot in right DP artery

Treatment Zone Aorta-iliac Femoral-popliteal Tibial- BTK (below the knee). Pedal- BTA (below the ankle).

Endovascular P.A.D. Treatment Angioplasty Mechanism: Catheter-guided balloon Balloon dilation Plaque displacement into the artery wall Vessel stretch and expansion Licensed from A.D.A.M., 2010 The information provided in this presentation was created with monetary support from ev3 Endovascular, Inc.

Endovascular P.A.D. Treatment Stents and Stent-Grafts Mechanism: Balloon-expandable or self-expanding Plaque displacement into the artery wall Vessel stretch and expansion Indications: Prevent recoil of the artery wall Repair complications resulting from angioplasty Licensed from A.D.A.M. & Nucleus Medical Media, 2010 The information provided in this presentation was created with monetary support from ev3 Endovascular, Inc.

Endovascular P.A.D. Treatment Atherectomy Mechanism: Debulk plaque Cut Pulverize Shave Remove or excise plaque Types: Directional or excisional Rotational or orbital Photoablative (excimer laser) Source: Garcia et al. (2009) The information provided in this presentation was created with monetary support from ev3 Endovascular, Inc.

Turbohawk

Thrombectomy/Thrombolysis Mechanical thrombectomy Aspiration Maceration Pharmacological thrombolysis Infusion of TPA On-table therapies Arterial and venous

Case Study 49 year old female with end stage CHF on continuous dobutamine drip. In need of heart transplant or LVAD. Non-healing wounds of right leg at previous saphenous vein harvest sight with underlying PAD.

Conclusions Endovascular Intervention is a crucial part in the management of PAD. New technology and maturing endovascular skill make it possible to treat increasingly complex lesions. At times these complex patients have limited treatment options, making endovascular intervention more attractive.

Future Drug Eluting Balloons/stents. IVUS based intervention.

Limb Salvage Program Tucson Medical Center Multidisciplinary Limb Salvage Team Vascular Surgery Podiatry Infectious Disease

TMC Limb Salvage Program Consult Initiated by ER docs. Admitting doc. Wound Care RN. Surrounding areas (324-4leg) Patient evaluated by Vascular and Podiatry and treatment carried out by appropriate team.

TMC Limb Salvage Program Goal- Early detection of PAD and lower extremity wounds to facilitate quicker treatment, adequate follow up, and ultimately prevent amputations.

Contact Information Dr. Matthew P. Namanny 520-306-7321 cell 520-318-3004 office ajnamanny@yahoo.com 6422 E. Speedway #150 Tucson, Arizona 85710 (520) 318-3004 www.saguarosurgical.com