Vascular
Surgery Now Considered Safe For Persons With Diabetes
Diabetics are often advised to avoid vascular
surgery because the operation could make them worse instead of better;
they have even been told they are better off having a leg amputated
than having the procedure.
However, a new study should put persons
with diabetes at ease. The study found that, in the short run,
their risk of dying after vascular surgery was actually lower than that
of those who did not have diabetes.
Physicians at Boston's Beth Israel Deaconess
Medical Center reviewed surgical outcomes of 6,565 patients over a 10-year
period, and found that the persons with diabetes had just under
a 1 percent mortality rate following major vascular surgery. In previous
studies, the death rate on the procedure has been as high as 4 percent,
says study author Dr. Allen D. Hamdan.
"Having diabetes does not predict a higher
risk for vascular surgery. In fact, there was a lower morbidity rate,"
says Hamdan, a vascular surgeon at Deaconess and an assistant professor
of surgery at Harvard Medical School. "What this means is that people
with diabetes should be treated like anyone else, on a case-by-case
basis, with regard to surgery."
There are about 16 million persons with
diabetes in the United States, and 800,000 new cases are diagnosed each
year, Hamdan says. The disease compromises the circulatory system, so
persons with diabetes have significantly more vascular problems such
as clotting and risk of gangrene in their outer limbs.
"It is an underlying truth" that patients
with diabetes have accelerated hardening of the arteries that leads
to problems all over the body at an earlier age and at a more accelerated
rate, he says.
This led to the belief that "diabetics
were felt to have a different type of vascular damage than non-diabetics.
The feeling was that those with diabetes had worse blockages than people
without diabetes," Hamdan says. "Because of this, simply the presence
of diabetes was thought to be an indicator of higher risk for surgery."
As a result, he says, patients were—and
still are—often advised to have amputations rather than vascular surgery
that might improve circulation.
However, Hamden and his colleagues statistically
analyzed outcomes for surgeries in the arteries of the neck and extremities,
as well as arteries leading to the heart. They found diabetics had a
death rate of 0.96 percent, compared with a 1.46 percent rate for non-diabetics
who had the same operation. Hamden says the results were a surprise.
However, he adds, his department works
very closely with the Joslin Diabetes Center in Boston, and the outcome
might reflect their careful attention to persons with diabetes.
"We have a very coordinated, multi-disciplinary
system with close ties to endocrinologists, cardiologists, anesthesiologists,
and nurses who specialize in diabetes," he says. "We have close follow-up,
and there's never any confusion."
"Diabetics are at much more higher risk
for vascular problems, so the results are very surprising," says Renee
Meehan, the diabetic clinical nurse specialist at Tampa General Hospital
in Florida.
The study also found, however, that diabetics
were at a slightly higher risk of having a heart attack after the procedure.
Moreover, the long-term survival rate was "significantly lower" among
diabetics than in the non-diabetics.
Always consult your physician for more
information regarding your individual risk.
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May 2002
A
Call For Change: Diabetes Care Is Not What it Should Be
Online Resources
In Other Diabetes Health
News:
A
Call For Change: Diabetes Care Is Not What it Should Be
New research published in
the Annals of Internal Medicine says Americans
with diabetes are not receiving the best care for their disease.
Scientists at the National
Center for Chronic Disease Prevention and Health Promotion
used data from two national surveys to analyze the quality of diabetes
care in the United States during the early 1990s.
The first, the Third US
National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (NHANES III) ran
from 1988 to 1994, and the second, from the Behavioral Risk Factors
Surveillance System (BRFSS), gathered information in 1995. All of
the people in the study, 1,026 from NHANES III and 3,059 from BRFSS,
were between 18 and 75 years old and had been diagnosed with diabetes.
The research examined
data gathered in the surveys, including blood sugar levels, blood
pressure, and cholesterol levels. It found that 18 percent of people
with diabetes had inadequate blood sugar control, 34 percent had
poor blood pressure control, and 58 percent had insufficient cholesterol
control.
Moreover, 37 percent did
not have annual eye examinations, which are essential for detecting
glaucoma, cataracts, or retina conditions associated with diabetes.
Another 45 percent did not have annual foot examinations, in which
physicians look for signs of foot ulcers, nerve damage, or poor
circulation. According to lead investigator Dr. Jinan B. Saaddine,
diabetes is the leading cause of blindness and lower extremity amputation.
Previous studies have
found that preventive care for type 2 diabetes varies widely from
state to state, with use of care highest in the Northeast and lowest
in the southern states. Research has consistently shown that people
without health insurance are the least likely to receive preventive
care for their diabetes. However, until now, experts did not have
a national picture of diabetes care.
Always consult your physician
for more information regarding appropriate diabetes care.
Online Resources:
American Diabetes Association
American Heart
Association
Annals of Internal Medicine
National Center for
Chronic Disease Prevention and Health Promotion
National Heart, Lung, and Blood
Institute
National
Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases (NIDDK)
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