American Society of Hirudotherapy

Standardized protocol for artery-only fingertip replantation

Buntic RF, Brooks D (2010) · The Journal of Hand Surgery · n=19

RCT evidence detailTrial reference
GRADE LowCohort / case series
Sample size of this trial compared with other digit-replantation trialsElyassi AR 201430Kameda Y 202525Buntic RF 201019
This trial (highlighted) by sample size alongside other indexed digit-replantation trials. Larger trials generally carry more statistical weight.

Study Profile

Design
single-center, prospective cohort study with standardized protocol for artery-only fingertip replantation, evidence level IV therapeutic (Buncke Clinic, California Pacific Medical Center, San Francisco, USA)
Sample size (n)
19
Intervention
Standardized postoperative protocol of intravenous dextran-40, heparin, aspirin, and medicinal leech therapy after artery-only fingertip replantation; bleeding promoted until physiologic venous outflow restored by neovascularization (mean 6 days)
Comparator
No randomized comparator - protocol evaluated against published artery-only replantation literature
Primary endpoint
Replant survival; secondary outcomes length of hospital stay, transfusion requirements, fluorescent dye perfusion studies for circulatory competence
Primary result
All 19 of 19 replants survived (100%); average length of hospital stay 9 days (range 7-17); 11 of 19 patients required blood transfusions; average transfusion 1.8 units (range 0-9); all patients satisfied with the decision to replant and the cosmetic result
Follow-up duration
post-discharge follow-up until full functional outcome assessment

Key Findings

  • 100% replant survival (19 of 19) in artery-only fingertip replantation using a standardized dextran-40 + heparin + aspirin + leech therapy protocol
  • Most-cited US hand-surgery protocol for artery-only fingertip replant management
  • Defines the role of medicinal leeches alongside systemic anticoagulation rather than as a sole salvage modality
  • 58% of patients required transfusion (mean 1.8 units) - documents the predictable transfusion burden of multi-day leech bleeding protocols
  • Hospital stay 9 days median - clinically meaningful resource utilization signal for the technique

Limitations

  • Single US center with single surgical team - protocol fidelity may not replicate in other settings
  • Small sample (n=19) - 100% survival rate could mask outliers in larger samples
  • No control arm - cannot isolate the contribution of leech therapy from systemic anticoagulation
  • Selected patient population (artery-only replants are a specific subset of all fingertip injuries)
  • Transfusion rate (58%) is high - clinically meaningful for anemia-prone or transfusion-refusing patients

Clinical Implications

Buntic 2010 established the most-cited US hand-surgery protocol for artery-only fingertip replantation and explicitly places medicinal leech therapy within a comprehensive postoperative anticoagulation strategy rather than as a standalone intervention. The 100% replant survival is striking but should be interpreted within the small sample (n=19) and surgeon-experience context. For US clinicians, this is the canonical reference describing how leech therapy is integrated into US-practice hand-surgery protocols. The transfusion burden (58% with mean 1.8 units) is a clinically meaningful counseling point for patients with anemia or religious transfusion refusal.

Related Trials

This website provides educational information and does not constitute medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment recommendations. Medicinal leech therapy carries clinically meaningful risks and should be performed only by qualified clinicians under institutionally approved protocols. FDA 510(k) clearance for medicinal leeches is limited to specific indications; investigational and off-label discussions are labeled accordingly. For patient-specific guidance, consult a qualified healthcare provider.