Preoperative haemoglobin as predictor of outcome of diabetic amputations
- PMID: 89280
- DOI: 10.1016/s0140-6736(79)91434-x
Preoperative haemoglobin as predictor of outcome of diabetic amputations
Abstract
Simple factors which may serve as predictors of the success or failure of amputations in the feet were examined in 59 consecutive diabetics. Age, sex, method of diabetic control, smoling, presence of neuropathy or peripheral pulses, preoperative blood-urea, and temperature did not correlate with success of amuptations. The average preoperative white-cell count and blood-sugar were higher in the failure group (p less than 0.01 and p less than 0.05 respectively), but there was considerable overlap between the groups. By contrast, the preoperative haemoglobin level was significantly lower (p less than 0.001) in patients whose amputations healed than in those with failure of healing, both at the digital and metatarsal or transmetatarsal levels; also, there was very little overlap in haemoglobin levels between the success and failure groups. All 18 amputations done in patients with a preoperative haemoglobin less than 12.0 g/dl were successful, whilst all 30 amputations in those with a preoperative level greater than 13.0 g/dl failed.
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