The challenging topic of diabetic foot revascularization: does the angiosome-guided angioplasty may improve outcome

J Cardiovasc Surg (Torino). 2012 Feb;53(1):3-12.

Abstract

The angiosome model was first pioneered by Jan Taylor in 1987 by his influential anatomical works in the plastic reconstructive surgery field. The concept depicts the human body into three-dimensional blocks of tissue, fed by specific arterial and venous irrigation sources, the "angiosomes". Adjacent angiosomes are linked by a vast compensatory collateral web "the choke vessels". This collateral network provides a remarkable "rescue system" in non-atherosclerotic and non-diabetic patients. However, it could be dramatically damaged in chronic limb ischemia (CLI) subjects witnessing miscellaneous systemic arterial disease. The angiosome concept may provide useful information on the human vascular anatomy and related pathology, with specific applications in surgical and vascular interventional therapies. This knowledge may become particularly beneficial in CLI while treating advanced atherosclerotic disease that adds extended collateral depletion. The concept may allow to deliberately focus arterial flow reconstruction in specific limb ischemic areas that exhibit tissue loss and fluctuating "rescue-vessels" supply. The implementation of angiosome-derived strategies in Rutherford grade III CLI presentations, may afford encouraging wound healing and limb preservation rates for both, bypass or endovascular techniques. The present paper proposes a parallel review of the main contemporary publications that share this theory in dedicated CLI literature, with practical considerations for its daily use. Recent applications of the angiosome concept in current CLI revascularization seem to evince benefic results in tissue cicatrization, although comparative and prospective data are further mandatory to cast any pertinent clinical validation.

Publication types

  • Review

MeSH terms

  • Angioplasty / methods*
  • Diabetic Foot / physiopathology
  • Diabetic Foot / surgery*
  • Endovascular Procedures / methods*
  • Foot / blood supply*
  • Humans
  • Regional Blood Flow*
  • Treatment Outcome