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Confirmation of Arterial Deficiencies in a Limb With Necrosis Following Clubfoot Surgery
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1999
Year
Limb ReconstructionVascular MalformationLower Limb TraumaSurgeryAnatomyOrthopaedic SurgeryVascular DeficiencyArterial DeficienciesVascular SurgeryOrthopaedicsLimb LengtheningFirst RayPeripheral Artery DiseaseLower Extremity WoundCongenital Vascular DeficiencyWound HealingPodiatryMedicineClubfoot Surgery
This study describes postoperative necrosis of the hallux and first ray in a child with clubfoot. Arteriography performed on this child's lower limbs demonstrated, in the operated leg, hypoplasia of both the anterior and posterior tibial arteries and failure of the dorsalis pedis artery to traverse the tarsus and complete the deep plantar arch. Previously, congenital vascular deficiency was suggested to predispose such operated limbs to necrosis. These findings confirm the association between vascular deficiency and necrosis. In this present study, the metabolic demands of wound healing were sufficient in a limb with vascular deficiency to cause localized distal hypoperfusion leading to cyanosis and necrosis of the hallux and medial foot.