Health Shared Logo whiteHealth Shared Logo dark

Complex Subintimal Below Knee Angioplasty

Ms Aditi RajgopalMs Aditi Rajgopal

Below The Knee Angioplasty (BTK) is an endovascular intervention (a less invasive way of improving blood flow to the foot than open surgery).

This type of treatment is indicated for people who have severe limb ischaemia.This is when there is narrowing of the arteriessupplying your muscles, causing decreased blood flow to a limb to a degree that it affects the limb’s viability. The narrowing is usually due to atherosclerosis (the deposition of fatty material into the vessel wall).This initially causes pain in the calves on walking (intermittent claudication), which means that you have to stop and rest in order to be able to walk a similar distance again. Progression of the disease can lead to complete blockage of the vessel (occlusion), which can result in gangrene, ulcers and leg pain at rest.

There are different treatment options for patients with occluded vessels which can be conservative or invasive. Lifestyle-modifying interventions include regular physical activity, quitting smoking as well as starting anti-platelet medications and medications to lower cholesterol like Aspirin and Clopidogrel. However when symptoms persist and claudication is limiting the ability to carry out work or perform other activities which is important to a person, revascularisation procedures can be discussed.

Endovascular interventions and by-pass surgery are called revascularisation procedures which aim to restore blood flow to the blood-deprived limbs.

Invasive procedures include:

1.   Endovascular treatment –balloon/stent angioplasty

2.    Surgical treatment -bypass surgery

Choosing between bypass-surgery and endovascular interventions is dependent on the location of the blockage, the vessel involved as well as patient factors such as age and other diseases they may be suffering from. Recent meta-analysis of critical limb ischaemia treatment suggests that endovascular strategy should be reserved for less fit patients with multiple comorbidities as first line of treatment and surgical option should be offered to the rest of patients as a first line of limb salvage treatment strategy.

There are different types of lesions of the artery: it can either get narrowed (stenosis) or blocked (occluded). The nature of your lesion will help to indicate the best treatment. The type of lesion will be identified with an x-ray, called an angiography, prior to the procedure. This article will focus on complex lesions. These tend to be long occlusions, classified as greater than 5cm, which tend to be treated with an endovascular process called subintimal angioplasty when surgery isn’t a viable option.


More from this author: