The Use of Medicinal Leeches for the Treatment of Venous Congestion in Replanted or Revascularized Digits
Arami A, Gurevitz S, Palti R, Menachem S, Berelowitz M, Yaffe B (2018) · Journal of Hand Surgery (American Volume) · n=25
Study Profile
- Design
- single-institution retrospective cohort study of patients with complete or incomplete digit amputation admitted to the Department of Hand Surgery at Sheba Medical Center (affiliated with Sackler School of Medicine, Tel Aviv University, Israel) between January 2008 and April 2014, evaluating salvage of venously congested digits replanted or revascularized proximal to the distal interphalangeal (DIP) joint and treated with medicinal leech therapy
- Sample size (n)
- 25
- Intervention
- Medicinal leech therapy applied for venous congestion of replanted or revascularized digits proximal to the DIP joint; treatment initiation and duration based on clinical judgment (no fixed protocol); part of a larger replant cohort of 145 patients / 205 digits
- Comparator
- Within-cohort comparison of replanted (n=22) versus revascularized (n=3) digits; no randomized comparator
- Primary endpoint
- Digit salvage rate following medicinal leech therapy for proximal digit venous congestion
- Primary result
- Of 25 venously congested digits treated with medicinal leeches, 11 survived (44%); salvage was 8 of 22 (36%) for replanted digits and 3 of 3 (100%) for revascularized digits; in 24 of 25 digits venous congestion was diagnosed >48 hours after operation; one patient required blood transfusion for substantial blood loss; no other major complications reported
- Follow-up duration
- duration of hospitalization plus institutional postoperative follow-up (variable)
- PMID
- 29602653
Key Findings
- 44% overall digit salvage rate (11 of 25) — lower than distal-tip series (typical 60-80%) but consistent with the larger tissue volume of proximal digit congestion
- 100% salvage for revascularized digits (3 of 3) versus 36% for replanted digits (8 of 22) suggests vascular reserve is a key prognostic factor
- 24 of 25 digits had congestion diagnosed >48 hours postoperatively — emphasizes the importance of early detection
- One transfusion-requiring blood loss event — bleeding is a real and clinically significant adverse event of multi-day leech protocols
- Israeli academic-center experience adds Middle East/Mediterranean geographic representation to the K040187 evidence base
Limitations
- Modest sample (n=25 leech-treated digits) — not powered to detect optimal protocol parameters
- Retrospective design — selection bias toward digits with intermediate prognosis
- Late diagnosis (>48 hr postoperatively in 96%) confounds salvage estimates and is a system-level finding rather than a leech-therapy efficacy finding
- No standardized leech protocol (number, frequency, duration) - clinical-judgment basis varies between providers
- Single-center single-country experience — generalizability untested
Clinical Implications
Arami 2018 is the principal published Israeli single-center series of medicinal leech therapy for proximal digit replantation and revascularization. For US clinicians, the trial provides a realistic salvage benchmark (44% overall, 100% for revascularization with preserved arterial inflow) and highlights that proximal-finger applications have lower success rates than distal-tip replants, likely reflecting the larger volume of congested tissue and the prevalence of late diagnosis. The trial supports the K040187 microsurgical-salvage indication while underlining the need for vigilant early postoperative monitoring of congestion and prompt initiation of leech therapy when indicated.
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