Sociedad Americana de Hirudoterapia

Protocolos clínicos

Directrices procedimentales completas desde la evaluación previa hasta el seguimiento

Last Updated: March 1, 2026Reviewed by: Andrei Dokukin, MDRegulatory Status: Clinical Evidence (Tier 2)

Clinical Evidence — Not FDA-Evaluated

Estos protocolos sintetizan guías clínicas publicadas, revisiones sistemáticas y mejores prácticas institucionales. Los profesionales deben adaptarlos a su entorno clínico específico y cumplir con las leyes de alcance de práctica estatales aplicables. Toda hirudoterapia debe ser realizada por o bajo la supervisión de profesionales de la salud licenciados.

Capítulo 22: Protocolos clínicos — Referencia completa

Esta página presenta el marco completo de protocolos clínicos para la terapia con sanguijuelas medicinales, cubriendo configuración de instalaciones, evaluación preprocedimiento, técnica de aplicación, monitoreo, cuidado postprocedimiento, manejo de complicaciones y documentación. Cada umbral, dosis y algoritmo proviene de evidencia revisada por pares y consenso experto (Mumcuoglu 2014; Whitaker 2012; Herlin 2017; Michalsen 2003, 2008, 2018).

La terapia con sanguijuelas medicinales (Hirudo verbana) es un procedimiento autorizado por FDA 510(k) que utiliza un dispositivo médico autorizado por 510(k) (categoría pre-enmienda no clasificada). Los resultados clínicos exitosos dependen de la adherencia rigurosa a protocolos estandarizados en cada fase: preparación de instalaciones, evaluación del paciente, selección y aplicación de sanguijuelas, monitoreo intraoperatorio, cuidado postprocedimiento de heridas, profilaxis antibiótica y manejo de complicaciones. Esta página proporciona la referencia procedimental completa.

Principios clave

  • Paradoja de esterilidad: El procedimiento utiliza un organismo vivo con un simbionte intestinal obligado (Aeromonas hydrophila). La prevención de infecciones depende de la profilaxis antibiótica, no solo de la técnica estéril.
  • La pérdida de sangre es acumulativa: Cada sanguijuela extrae 15-65 mL. Los protocolos microquirúrgicos seriados (3-6 sanguijuelas c/4h × 5 días) pueden producir 2-5 litros de pérdida sanguínea acumulada. El 49.75% de los pacientes microquirúrgicos requieren transfusión (Whitaker 2012).
  • El consentimiento es crítico: El consentimiento informado es el área de mayor riesgo medicolegal. Los pacientes deben comprender la cicatriz en forma de Y, el sangrado de 4 a 24 horas, el riesgo de infección del 7-20% sin profilaxis y la posibilidad de transfusión.
  • Nunca jalar a la fuerza: La remoción forzada arriesga la regurgitación de Aeromonas en la herida, avulsión de dientes y trauma tisular.
  • Documentar todo: Lista de verificación preprocedimiento, notas SOAP, órdenes postprocedimiento e instrucciones de alta forman un registro medicolegal defendible.

Requisitos de instalaciones y equipamiento

Procedure Room Specifications

ParameterSpecificationRationale
Temperature22–25°C (72–77°F)Leeches become sluggish below 20°C; above 25°C increases metabolic stress
LightingBright, adjustable overheadPrecise site visualization; dimming for patient comfort during wait
VentilationAdequate airflow; no fragrancesLeeches refuse attachment in presence of perfumes, disinfectant fumes, or strong odors
SurfacesNonporous, easily disinfectedBlood and body fluid cleanup; OSHA compliance
Sink accessHandwashing station within roomHand hygiene before/after; water for leech handling
Patient positioningAdjustable chair or examination tablePatient must remain comfortable for 30–90 minutes; recline capability for vasovagal

Equipment List (19 Items)

#ItemSpecificationEst. Cost (USD)
1FDA-cleared medicinal leechesHirudo verbana; suppliers: Ricarimpex (France), Biopharm (UK), Carolina Biological (US)$10–15/leech
2Storage containersGlass jars, 1–3L, wide-mouth$5–15
3Dechlorinated waterBottled spring water or tap water aged 24h uncovered$3–10
4Aquarium thermometerSubmersible, range 10–30°C$3–8
5Nitrile examination glovesBox of 100, nonlatex (latex may deter leeches)$8–15
6Blunt-tipped forcepsStainless steel, for leech transfer (not grasping)$5–10
7Syringe guides5–10 mL syringes with plunger removed; directs leech to precise site$0.50 each
8Sterile gauze pads4×4 inch, non-woven; large quantity for post-detachment bleeding$5–10/pack
9Semi-permeable membraneThin barrier film to confine leeches to application zone$5–15
10Absorbent underpadsDisposable, waterproof backing, for bed/chair protection$10–20/pack
11Biohazard waste containerRed, leak-proof, biohazard labeled$15–30
1270% ethyl alcohol500 mL; for euthanizing used leeches and detachment stimulation$5–10
13Medical tapeHypoallergenic, paper or silk; for dressing securement$3–5
14Application window/ringAdhesive barrier to restrict leech migration; optional$5–10
15Vital signs monitorBlood pressure cuff, pulse oximeter, thermometer$50–300
16TimerDigital timer for feeding duration and monitoring intervals$5–10
17Camera / phoneClinical photography for wound documentation (with consent)Existing
18Sterile needle (25G)For producing blood droplet to encourage attachment$0.10 each
19Emergency supplies kitSee Emergency Supplies section below$200–500
Total Startup Cost (excluding leeches)$350–$1,000

Leech Storage & Quality Assurance

Storage Protocol (8 Points)

  1. Use glass jars (1–3L) with wide mouths — never plastic (chemical leaching)
  2. Fill with dechlorinated water: bottled spring water OR tap water left uncovered 24 hours to off-gas chlorine
  3. Change water every 3–4 days; inspect for turbidity, dead leeches, or mucus
  4. Maximum density: 10 leeches per liter of water
  5. Cover with 4-layer gauze secured by rubber band — leeches are strong escape artists
  6. Store at 18–22°C (64–72°F); away from sunlight and vibration
  7. No aromatic substances in storage area (perfumes, cleaning agents, hand sanitizer)
  8. Never mix fed and unfed leeches — fed leeches release digestive enzymes; unfed leeches may cannibalize

Shelf life: Use within 30 days of receipt for optimal feeding activity and therapeutic efficacy.

Daily inspection: Check for lethargic or dead leeches (pale, non-responsive to touch); remove immediately.

Quality Indicators for Therapy-Ready Leeches (5 Criteria)

  1. Active swimming: Vigorous, sinusoidal movement when container is gently agitated
  2. Firm body: Muscular tone when lifted with blunt forceps; not flaccid or bloated
  3. Dark coloration: Healthy olive-green to dark brown dorsal surface; ventral lighter
  4. Responsive to stimulation: Contracts rapidly when touched; anterior sucker actively explores
  5. No visible lesions: No white patches, ulcers, swelling, or mucus coating

Reject Criteria

Discard leeches that are lethargic, pale, bloated, have white patches, or fail to contract when stimulated. Do not use leeches that have been stored >30 days. A leech that refuses to attach to prepared warm skin with a blood droplet should be replaced — do not persist with an unwilling leech.

Emergency Supplies

Required at Point of Care

All emergency supplies must be immediately accessible in the procedure room before initiating leech therapy. Verify expiration dates monthly.
#ItemSpecificationPurpose
1Epinephrine autoinjector0.3 mg IM (adult); 0.15 mg (pediatric)Anaphylaxis first-line treatment
2Diphenhydramine50 mg IM injectableAllergic reaction; adjunct to epinephrine
3Silver nitrate sticks75% silver nitrate / 25% potassium nitrateChemical cauterization of bleeding bite wounds
4Topical thrombin / GelfoamAbsorbable gelatin sponge or topical bovine thrombinHemostasis for refractory oozing
5Suture kit3-0 and 4-0 absorbable suture with needle driverFigure-of-eight closure for refractory bleeding
6Normal saline500 mL bags (0.9% NaCl), ×2Volume resuscitation, wound irrigation
7Aminocaproic acidOral or IV formulationAntifibrinolytic for refractory bleeding
8Blood pressure cuffManual or automatic, multiple cuff sizesHemodynamic monitoring
9Pulse oximeterFingertip, with alarm capabilityContinuous oxygenation monitoring
10IV access supplies18G and 20G catheters, tubing, tape, tourniquetRapid vascular access for resuscitation
11Oxygen deliveryNasal cannula + non-rebreather mask; portable O2 tankRespiratory support for anaphylaxis/vasovagal
12Albuterol inhalerMDI with spacerBronchospasm management in allergic reaction

Estimated cost: $200–500 for complete emergency kit. Verify expiration dates during monthly equipment check.

Pre-Procedure Assessment

Patient History Screening

A targeted history focusing on bleeding risk, infection vulnerability, and prior leech exposure is essential before initiating therapy. The following 7 conditions require specific evaluation:

ConditionScreening FocusAction
Bleeding disordersHemophilia, von Willebrand, thrombocytopenia, liver-related coagulopathyHematology consult; may be absolute CI if severe
Hepatic diseaseCirrhosis, synthetic dysfunction, portal hypertensionCheck PT/INR, albumin; coagulopathy risk
Renal diseaseCKD stage, dialysis, uremic platelet dysfunctionCheck BMP, bleeding time; dose-adjust antibiotics
ImmunocompromisedHIV/AIDS, transplant, chemotherapy, biologics, chronic steroidsDo NOT hold immunosuppressants; increase infection surveillance
Cardiovascular diseaseAnticoagulation status, prosthetic valves, recent MI/stentCoordinate med hold with cardiology; bridge if needed
Diabetes mellitusType, HbA1c, neuropathy, peripheral vascular diseaseIncreased infection risk; impaired wound healing; closer follow-up
Prior leech therapyPrevious reactions, allergy, infection, sensitizationIgE sensitization possible; if prior anaphylaxis = absolute CI

Allergy-Specific Screening

Antibiotic Allergies

Specifically ask about fluoroquinolone (cipro) and sulfonamide (TMP-SMX) allergies — these are the two first-line prophylactic agents. Document reaction type (rash vs. anaphylaxis) to guide alternative selection.

Leech Saliva Allergy

Itching occurs in 37–75% of patients (not allergy). True IgE-mediated reactions to hirudin and other salivary proteins are rare but documented. Prior anaphylaxis to leech therapy is an absolute contraindication.

Latex Allergy

Use nitrile gloves exclusively. Latex gloves near the application site may transfer residue that deters leech attachment and trigger patient reaction.

History of present illness (HPI): Document the specific indication for leech therapy, relevant surgical history (replantation, flap type, timing), and current status of the tissue/joint being treated.

Elderly Patient Considerations (>65 Years)

Elderly patients require additional pre-procedure assessment and monitoring due to age-related physiological changes that affect treatment safety and outcomes.

Pre-Procedure Assessment

  • Comprehensive medication review: Document all anticoagulants, antiplatelets, NSAIDs, and supplements (fish oil, vitamin E, ginkgo). Polypharmacy is common in elderly patients and significantly increases bleeding risk.
  • Renal function assessment: Calculate CrCl (Cockcroft-Gault) for antibiotic dosing. Fluoroquinolone prophylaxis requires dose adjustment if CrCl <50 mL/min. Ciprofloxacin: 250 mg BID if CrCl 30–50; avoid if <30.
  • Baseline hematology: CBC with differential, INR/aPTT, BMP. Lower transfusion threshold (Hgb <8 g/dL in patients with cardiovascular disease). Type and screen for patients on serial protocols.
  • Skin integrity assessment: Age-related skin thinning increases wound healing time and scarring risk. Document skin condition at application site. Consider reduced leech numbers per session.
  • Cardiovascular assessment: Evaluate for orthostatic hypotension risk, especially with anticipated blood loss. Heart failure patients may have reduced blood volume tolerance.

Monitoring Adjustments

  • More frequent vital signs: Q2h (vs standard Q4h) during active treatment, especially in patients with cardiovascular comorbidities.
  • Lower intervention thresholds: Consider transfusion at Hgb <8 g/dL (vs <7 in younger patients), particularly in patients with coronary artery disease.
  • Extended post-procedure observation: Minimum 2 hours post-detachment (vs 1 hour standard) due to delayed recognition of symptoms in elderly patients.
  • Fall prevention: Assess mobility and balance before discharge. Ensure caregiver availability for first 24 hours post-treatment.
  • Wound care education: Provide written instructions with large font. Confirm understanding with teach-back method. Engage caregiver in discharge education.

Laboratory Requirements

TestPurposeAction ThresholdAction
CBC (Complete Blood Count)Baseline hemoglobin/hematocrit and platelet countHgb <8 g/dL; Plt <50,000/µLHgb <8: transfuse before proceeding. Plt <50K: relative CI — hematology consult, weigh risk/benefit
PT / INRCoagulation status (warfarin, liver disease)INR >3.0; INR 2.0–3.0INR >3.0: hold warfarin, recheck, do not proceed. INR 2.0–3.0: proceed with caution, extra hemostasis supplies
aPTTIntrinsic pathway / heparin monitoring>2× upper limit of normalInvestigate cause; consider heparin hold or reversal; consult hematology
Type & ScreenBlood bank readiness for transfusionRequired for all surgical/inpatient49.75% of microsurgical patients require transfusion (Whitaker 2012). Must be current (<72h)
BMP (Basic Metabolic Panel)Renal function baseline; electrolyte statusCr >2.0 or GFR <30Dose-adjust renally cleared antibiotics; closer monitoring of fluid balance in multi-day protocols
Blood CulturesRule out active sepsis if febrileT >38.0°C or clinical suspicionActive sepsis = absolute contraindication to leech therapy. Treat infection first.

Outpatient Exception

For single-session outpatient musculoskeletal applications (2–8 leeches): CBC + PT/INR are sufficient in healthy patients without bleeding history or anticoagulant use. Type & screen, aPTT, BMP, and blood cultures are not routinely required for low-volume outpatient sessions.

Medication Management

Anticoagulants, antiplatelet agents, and NSAIDs significantly increase bleeding risk. The following hold schedules balance bleeding risk against thromboembolic risk. Note: 54.29% of microsurgical protocols use concomitant anticoagulation (Whitaker 2012) — medication holds may not apply in surgical salvage contexts.

Drug ClassExamplesHold TimeNotes
WarfarinCoumadinHold 3–5 daysTarget INR <2.0 for elective; bridge with LMWH if high thrombotic risk (mechanical valve, recent DVT)
DOACsRivaroxaban, apixaban, dabigatran, edoxabanHold 24–48hShorter half-life than warfarin; 48h for dabigatran if CrCl <50; reversal agents available (idarucizumab, andexanet)
Heparin (IV UFH)Unfractionated heparin dripHold 4–6hCheck aPTT before proceeding; protamine available for reversal
LMWHEnoxaparin, dalteparinHold 12–24h12h for prophylactic dose; 24h for therapeutic dose; partial protamine reversal
AspirinASA 81–325 mgDo NOT routinely hold (surgical); Hold 7 days (elective)Irreversible COX-1 inhibition; in microsurgical salvage, aspirin is often deliberately continued for antiplatelet effect
ClopidogrelPlavixHold 5–7 daysIrreversible P2Y12 inhibition; coordinate with cardiology if recent stent (<12 months)
NSAIDsIbuprofen, naproxen, diclofenac, ketorolacHold 3–5 days pre-procedureReversible COX inhibition; also avoid post-procedure for 48h (prolongs bleeding from hirudin's anticoagulant effect)
ImmunosuppressantsTacrolimus, mycophenolate, methotrexate, biologicsDo NOT holdHolding risks rejection/flare. Instead: increase infection surveillance, lower threshold for empiric antibiotics, closer wound monitoring

Consentimiento informado

Highest Medicolegal Risk Area

Informed consent is the single highest malpractice risk in leech therapy. Documentation must be thorough, signed, and include all elements below. Verbal-only consent is insufficient.

Required Consent Elements

Nature of the Procedure

  • Live FDA 510(k)-cleared medical devices (Hirudo verbana)
  • Leeches attach via tripartite jaw producing a characteristic Y-shaped bite mark
  • Feeding duration: 20–45 minutes per leech (up to 60–90 min for large leeches)
  • Leeches inject saliva containing hirudin (anticoagulant) and other bioactive compounds
  • Post-detachment oozing is expected and therapeutic (continued decompression)

Expected Benefits

  • Venous decongestion and improved tissue perfusion
  • Tissue/flap salvage (78% overall salvage rate; Whitaker 2012)
  • Pain reduction in musculoskeletal conditions
  • Local anti-inflammatory and analgesic effects via salivary compounds

Alternatives to Leech Therapy

  • Heparin-soaked gauze (passive decompression)
  • Surgical revision / re-exploration
  • Hyperbaric oxygen therapy (HBO)
  • Negative pressure wound therapy (NPWT)
  • Observation and expectant management
  • Patient may refuse treatment at any time

Common Side Effects (Expected)

Side EffectFrequencyDuration
Post-detachment bleeding/oozing100%4 to 24 hours (normal)
Mild sting/pinch at attachment~100%30 seconds to 2 minutes
Itching at bite site37–75%1–14 days; may be delayed
Local hematoma / ecchymosisCommon5–14 days
Y-shaped bite scar100%Permanent; 2–3 mm; fades over months
Regional lymphadenitis6–13%Days to weeks; self-limiting

Serious Risks (Must Disclose)

RiskRateDetails
Aeromonas infection7–20% (without prophylaxis)Prophylactic antibiotics reduce risk to <5%. Infection drops tissue salvage from 88% to 37.4%
Transfusion requirement49.75% (surgical series)Cumulative blood loss in serial protocols. Type & screen required for surgical patients
Allergic reaction / anaphylaxisRare (<1%)IgE sensitization to leech SGS proteins; may occur on re-exposure
Treatment failure22%78% overall salvage rate; failure increases with infection, delay, and arterial insufficiency

Leech Selection & Dosing by Indication

Selection Criteria

Size Selection

  • Small (3–5 cm): Delicate areas — digits, ears, eyelids, pediatric
  • Standard (6–10 cm): Most indications — flaps, joints, general use
  • Large (>10 cm): Heavy decompression — large flaps, extensive congestion

Activity Assessment

  • Vigorous swimming when agitated
  • Rapid contraction when touched
  • Active exploration with anterior sucker
  • Firm muscular body tone

Hunger Verification

  • Flat, non-distended body (not recently fed)
  • Actively seeking warm objects/skin
  • Unfed for minimum 2–4 weeks (supplier standard)
  • Never use a leech that has previously fed on a patient

Indication-Specific Dosing Protocol

IndicationStandard DoseRangeFrequencyContext
Digit replantation1–21–3Every 2–4 hoursFDA-cleared; small leeches; serial application days 1–5
Ear replantation1–21–3Every 2–4 hoursFDA-cleared; small leeches; delicate tissue handling
Free flap (head/neck)2–41–6Every 2–8 hoursFDA-cleared; standard leeches; assess tissue color between sessions
DIEP/TRAM breast flap2–31–4Every 4–8 hoursFDA-cleared; standard to large leeches; larger surface area
Knee osteoarthritis4–64–8Single treatmentPeriarticular placement; RCT-supported (Michalsen 2003, n=51)
Thumb CMC-1 OA2–32–3Single treatmentSmall leeches; periarticular (Michalsen 2008, n=32)
Lateral epicondylitis2–42–4Single treatmentOver lateral epicondyle (Backer 2011, n=52)
Chronic low back pain4–74–7Single treatmentParavertebral bilateral placement (Michalsen 2018, n=44)

Shaded rows = FDA 510(k)-cleared microsurgical indications.

Blood Loss Estimation

Each leech removes approximately 15–65 mL total: 5–15 mL during active feeding + 10–50 mL post-detachment oozing (anticoagulant effect of injected hirudin). For a single session with 6 leeches, anticipate 90–390 mL total blood loss.

Serial microsurgical protocol: 3–6 leeches every 4 hours × 5 days = potential cumulative blood loss of 2–5 liters. This is why 49.75% of microsurgical patients require transfusion (Whitaker 2012). Hematocrit monitoring every 4–8 hours is mandatory.

Site Preparation & Application Technique

Site Preparation (5 Steps)

  1. Clean with warm water only — NO alcohol, betadine, chlorhexidine, or any antiseptic. Chemical residues prevent leech attachment and may be toxic to the leech.
  2. Shave hair if present — Leeches cannot attach through hair; clip or shave a 5 cm radius around each intended site.
  3. Mark application sites — Use a surgical skin marker to indicate exact placement points. Essential for documenting bite locations and ensuring symmetric placement.
  4. Apply application window (optional) — An adhesive ring or barrier film around the target area prevents leech migration to unintended sites. Especially useful for facial or periorbital application.
  5. Protect surrounding areas — Absorbent underpads beneath the treatment area. Barrier drapes to prevent leech escape. Warm the skin if ambient temperature is low (warm moist gauze for 2–3 minutes).

Standard Application Method (5 Steps)

  1. Don nitrile gloves; have forceps, gauze, and containment supplies within reach
  2. Transfer selected leech(es) from storage jar to a small clean container using blunt forceps
  3. Invert the small container directly over the prepared application site; leech drops onto skin
  4. Leech attaches within 30 seconds to 5 minutes — confirmed by rhythmic body contractions (peristaltic feeding movements)
  5. Cover feeding leech loosely with moist gauze (3–4 layers) to maintain humidity and prevent desiccation; do not compress

Syringe Guide Method (Precise Placement)

  1. Remove plunger from a 5–10 mL syringe. Place leech inside the barrel with anterior (head) end toward the open tip.
  2. Press syringe tip firmly against skin at the exact target point. The confined space directs the leech to attach at the precise location.
  3. Once attached (rhythmic contractions visible), gently slide syringe barrel away. Optionally, pulling the plunger creates mild negative pressure to encourage engorgement.

Best for: Digits, ears, small flaps, areas near critical structures (eyes, orifices), or when precision placement within millimeters is required.

Troubleshooting Attachment Refusal

  1. Warm the skin with a moist warm gauze compress for 2–3 minutes (increases blood flow to surface)
  2. Prick the skin with a sterile 25G needle to produce a small blood droplet at the target site
  3. Try a different leech — some individual leeches are more responsive than others
  4. Ensure no chemical residues on skin (alcohol, soap, perfume, antiseptic)
  5. Check room temperature (must be 22–25°C) and absence of strong odors

Ominous Sign

Persistent refusal by multiple leeches to attach to a surgical site (flap or replant) despite warm skin and blood droplet may indicate nonviable tissue with inadequate perfusion. This is a diagnostic finding that should prompt urgent surgical reassessment.

NEVER Forcibly Pull a Feeding Leech

Forcible removal of an attached leech risks: (1) regurgitation of gut contents including Aeromonas hydrophila directly into the wound, (2) avulsion of jaw parts embedded in tissue requiring surgical removal, and (3) tissue trauma at the bite site. Use stimulation techniques (alcohol-soaked cotton near the anterior sucker) or wait for natural detachment.

Intraoperative Monitoring

Surgical / Inpatient Monitoring (6 Parameters)

ParameterFrequencyThreshold / Action
Vital signs (HR, BP, SpO2, Temp)Every 30 min during active feedingTachycardia >100, SBP <90, SpO2 <92%: reassess and intervene
Tissue assessmentEvery 30 min (color, turgor, cap refill, Doppler)Worsening congestion despite therapy: increase leech frequency or number; persistent arterial insufficiency: surgical re-exploration
Hematocrit / HemoglobinEvery 4–8 hoursTransfuse if Hgb <7 g/dL (or <8 in CAD patients). 49.75% will need transfusion
Leech feeding statusContinuous visual observationDetachment before 20 min: tissue may lack adequate perfusion. Failure to engorge: try different leech or reassess tissue viability
Post-detachment bleedingEvery 1–2 hours for first 6 hoursCount saturated gauze pads; >10 pads in 4 hours = activate bleeding algorithm
Pain assessment (NRS 0–10)Every 2 hoursScore >5: acetaminophen 1000 mg PO/IV. Avoid NSAIDs. Score >7: consider opioid rescue

Outpatient / Musculoskeletal Monitoring (3 Parameters)

ParameterTimingAction
Vital signsBefore and after procedureDocument baseline and post-procedure; hold discharge if SBP <100 or symptomatic orthostasis
Pain (NRS)Before, during, and 30 min afterReport sustained >5/10 after procedure. Document pain trajectory for efficacy assessment
Bleeding statusAt detachment and 30 min postEnsure manageable oozing before discharge; patient must demonstrate dressing management

Feeding Duration & Detachment

Duration

  • Typical feeding: 20–45 minutes
  • Large leeches / heavy congestion: 60–90 minutes
  • Engorgement: 5–10× original body weight when fully sated
  • Leech detaches spontaneously when sated — do not rush

Detachment Techniques (If Early Termination Needed)

  • Natural: Wait for spontaneous detachment (preferred)
  • Stimulation: Gently touch cotton swab moistened with 70% alcohol or vinegar near (not on) the anterior sucker
  • Salt/alcohol: Place a few grains of table salt or a drop of alcohol adjacent to the head end
  • NEVER: Pull, twist, burn, or apply substances directly onto the leech body

Disposal Protocol (6 Steps)

  1. Immediately place detached leech into 70% ethyl alcohol — euthanasia within minutes
  2. Transfer euthanized leech to red biohazard waste container
  3. Seal container when full; label with date and contents
  4. Dispose through regulated medical waste stream per OSHA 29 CFR 1910.1030
  5. Never reuse a leech that has fed on a patient (blood-borne pathogen transmission risk)
  6. Never flush or dispose in sinks, toilets, or regular trash

Post-Procedure Wound Care

Immediate Wound Management (5 Steps)

  1. Apply clean dry gauze (4×4) directly over each bite site — do NOT apply direct pressure (oozing is therapeutic for venous decompression)
  2. Layer additional absorbent pads over the initial gauze — expect significant saturation over 4–10 hours
  3. Secure with medical tape or light wrap — no compression bandaging (compression defeats the purpose of continued oozing)
  4. When blood saturates dressing, ADD layers on top — do NOT remove the underlying dressing for 24 hours (removing disrupts early clot formation)
  5. Place absorbent underpads beneath the treatment area to protect bedding/clothing — especially important for overnight

Patient Wound Care Instructions (6 Points)

  1. Expect oozing through bandages for 4 to 24 hours — this is normal and expected
  2. Add fresh gauze on top of saturated dressings; do not remove the bottom layer for 24 hours
  3. After 24 hours: gently remove dressing, clean with warm water and mild soap only
  4. Apply a clean dry dressing; change daily for 3–5 days until wound is dry
  5. Do not apply hydrogen peroxide, alcohol, betadine, or antibiotic ointment to bite wounds
  6. Keep the treatment area elevated above heart level when possible to reduce bleeding

Bleeding Timeline

Normal Bleeding Pattern

  • 0–2 hours: Active oozing, gauze saturates rapidly
  • 2–6 hours: Gradual slowing; oozing continues but rate decreases
  • 6 to 24 hours: Gradual cessation of oozing; dressings less saturated
  • 10–24 hours: Complete cessation; wound begins to crust

Concerning Bleeding (Activate Algorithm)

  • Persistent brisk bleeding beyond 10 hours
  • Saturating >10 gauze pads (4×4) in 4 hours
  • Hemodynamic changes: tachycardia, hypotension, dizziness, syncope
  • Visible pulsatile bleeding (arterial — rare but emergent)
  • Patient reports feeling faint or lightheaded

Serial Surgical Blood Loss Warning

Serial microsurgical protocols (3–6 leeches q4h × 5 days) may produce 2–5 liters of cumulative blood loss. Hematocrit must be checked every 4–8 hours. Transfuse when Hgb <7 g/dL (or <8 in patients with coronary artery disease). 49.75% of patients in the Whitaker 2012 systematic review required transfusion.

Antibiotic Prophylaxis

Critical: Begin BEFORE First Leech

Antibiotic prophylaxis must be initiated before the first leech is applied and continued throughout the treatment course plus 24–48 hours after the last leech application. Without prophylaxis, Aeromonas infection rates are 7–20%; with prophylaxis, rates drop to <5% (0% in Nguyen 2012, n=39).

First-Line Regimens

RegimenDrugDoseRouteDuration
Preferred (Herlin 2017)Ciprofloxacin + TMP-SMX DS500 mg BID + 160/800 mg BIDPOThrough treatment + 24–48h after last leech
Monotherapy option ACiprofloxacin alone500 mg BIDPOThrough treatment + 24–48h
Monotherapy option BTMP-SMX DS alone160/800 mg BIDPOThrough treatment + 24–48h

Alternative Regimens (Allergy-Based)

Allergy / ContraindicationAlternative RegimenDoseRoute
Fluoroquinolone allergyTMP-SMX DS alone160/800 mg BIDPO
Sulfonamide allergyCiprofloxacin alone500 mg BIDPO
Both FQ + sulfa allergyCeftriaxone1 g dailyIV
Pediatric patientsTMP-SMX pediatric dosing4 mg/kg TMP + 20 mg/kg SMX BIDPO

Resistance Alert

Ciprofloxacin resistance has been documented in up to 43% of environmental Aeromonas isolates (Giltner 2013). Plasmid-mediated quinolone resistance (PMQR) genes have been found in 42% of freshwater Aeromonas species. This is the primary rationale for dual-agent prophylaxis (cipro + TMP-SMX) rather than ciprofloxacin monotherapy.

Avoid: First-generation cephalosporins (intrinsic Aeromonasresistance via chromosomal beta-lactamases). Amoxicillin/ampicillin (poor activity against Aeromonas).

Batch Surveillance Protocol (Institutions Using >50 Leeches/Month)

  1. On receipt: Culture 1 leech per batch (sacrifice for gut swab) — aerobic culture specifically requesting Aeromonas identification and susceptibilities
  2. Every 30 days: Culture 1 leech from each active storage container to monitor for resistance drift during storage
  3. Record results in institutional antibiogram specific to leech-sourced Aeromonas — track cipro, TMP-SMX, ceftriaxone, meropenem, and gentamicin susceptibilities
  4. Adjust empiric prophylaxis based on batch-specific resistance patterns — if cipro resistance >20% in batch, switch to TMP-SMX monotherapy or add second agent
  5. Report MDR isolates to the leech supplier, infection control committee, and state public health department if resistance to ≥3 classes is identified

Pain Management & Itching

Pain Management Protocol

  • First-line: Acetaminophen 500–1000 mg PO q6h (max 4g/day); effective for mild-moderate post-procedure pain
  • AVOID NSAIDs for 48 hours post-procedure: Ibuprofen, naproxen, and ketorolac inhibit platelet function and prolong the anticoagulant effect of injected hirudin, significantly increasing bleeding duration
  • AVOID aspirin for 7 days post-procedure: Irreversible COX-1 inhibition compounds leech-induced anticoagulation
  • Moderate-severe pain: Opioid rescue — oxycodone 5 mg PO q4-6h PRN or tramadol 50 mg PO q6h; short course only
  • Surgical patients: IV acetaminophen 1000 mg q6h; PCA if multi-day protocol with significant pain

Itching Management

Itching at the bite site occurs in 37–75% of patients. This is a local histamine-mediated reaction to salivary proteins, NOT an allergic reaction in most cases. Onset may be immediate or delayed 2–7 days.

  • Oral antihistamine: Cetirizine 10 mg daily (non-sedating) or diphenhydramine 25–50 mg q6h PRN (sedating)
  • Topical steroid: Hydrocortisone 1% cream applied to bite sites after 24 hours only (do not apply to actively oozing wounds)
  • Cool compress: 10–15 minutes PRN for symptomatic relief
  • Do NOT scratch: Risk of secondary bacterial infection of bite wounds

Excessive Bleeding Algorithm

A 5-step escalating approach to post-detachment hemorrhage. Most bleeding resolves with Steps 1–2. Progression to Step 5 is rare but requires immediate resources.

Step 1 — Assessment

  • Characterize bleeding: brisk flow vs. slow ooze
  • Count saturated gauze pads per hour
  • Check vital signs: HR, BP, orthostatics if ambulatory
  • Check most recent hematocrit; order STAT if >4h old
  • Review medications (anticoagulants, antiplatelets, NSAIDs)
  • Normal: Oozing for 4 to 24 hours post-detachment is expected and does not require intervention

Step 2 — Conservative Measures

  • Add additional gauze layers; apply firm direct pressure for 15–20 minutes (timed)
  • Elevate the treatment area above heart level
  • Review and hold any anticoagulants/antiplatelets if clinically safe
  • Apply ice pack wrapped in cloth adjacent to (not directly on) wound

Step 3 — Topical Hemostatic Agents

  • Silver nitrate stick: Apply directly to the bite wound for chemical cauterization (5–10 seconds per wound)
  • Topical thrombin: Apply directly to oozing wound surface
  • Absorbable gelatin sponge (Gelfoam): Pack into the Y-shaped bite wound and apply gentle pressure

Step 4 — Suture Closure

  • Figure-of-eight suture through the Y-shaped bite wound using 3-0 or 4-0 absorbable suture
  • This is definitive local hemostasis for refractory bite-site bleeding
  • Consider aminocaproic acid (antifibrinolytic) if diffuse oozing from multiple sites
  • Order STAT CBC, PT/INR, aPTT, fibrinogen
  • Establish IV access if not already present

Step 5 — Hemodynamic Instability (Rare)

  • IV crystalloid: Normal saline 500–1000 mL bolus for volume resuscitation
  • Type & crossmatch: Order immediately if not already current
  • Transfuse: pRBC if Hgb <7 g/dL (or <8 in CAD). FFP if INR >1.5. Platelets if <50K and actively bleeding
  • Discontinue leech therapy until hemodynamically stable and coagulopathy corrected
  • Hematology consult for refractory coagulopathy or DIC workup
  • Surgical consult if arterial bleeding suspected or local measures fail

49.75% of microsurgical patients require transfusion during leech therapy courses (Whitaker 2012). This is an expected complication, not a failure of technique.

Aeromonas Infection Algorithm

Aeromonas hydrophila is the primary infectious risk, accounting for 88% of all infectious complications. Onset: 24 hours to 10 days (up to 26 days). Infection reduces tissue salvage from 88.3% to 37.4% (Whitaker 2012).

Step 1 — Recognition (7 Clinical Signs)

  1. Expanding erythema >2 cm beyond bite site borders (mark and track)
  2. Purulent or seropurulent drainage from bite wounds
  3. Increasing pain after 48 hours (pain should be decreasing by this point)
  4. Fever >38.0°C / 100.4°F
  5. Regional lymphadenopathy (palpable tender nodes in draining basin)
  6. Tissue necrosis or color change at or near bite sites
  7. Systemic signs: rigors, tachycardia, hypotension, elevated WBC/CRP

Step 2 — Immediate Actions

  1. Wound culture: Aerobic swab; specifically request Aeromonas identification and full susceptibilities
  2. Blood cultures ×2: If systemic signs (fever, tachycardia, hypotension)
  3. Labs: CBC with differential, CRP, BMP, lactate if sepsis concern
  4. Clinical photography: Document wound appearance; mark erythema borders with skin marker and timestamp
  5. Escalate prophylactic antibiotics to empiric treatment doses (see table below)

Step 3 — Empiric Antibiotic Therapy (by Severity)

SeverityCriteriaRegimenRoute
MildLocal signs only; no systemic symptoms; stable vitalsCiprofloxacin 500 mg BID + TMP-SMX DS BIDPO
ModerateSpreading cellulitis; low-grade fever; elevated WBCCeftriaxone 1g daily + Ciprofloxacin 400 mg q12hIV
Severe / SepsisHigh fever; hemodynamic changes; tissue necrosis; bacteremiaMeropenem 1g q8h + Gentamicin 5 mg/kg dailyIV

Step 4 — Culture-Directed Adjustment

  • Narrow antibiotics based on culture susceptibilities (typically available 48–72h)
  • If MDR (multi-drug resistant): escalate to carbapenems (meropenem, imipenem)
  • Monitor resistance patterns; update institutional antibiogram
  • ID (Infectious Disease) consultation for MDR isolates or treatment failure

Step 5 — Surgical Intervention

  • Debridement: Required if tissue necrosis develops; may require serial debridement
  • Emergent flap revision: If infection threatens the primary surgical reconstruction
  • Critical statistic: Infection drops tissue salvage from 88.3% to 37.4% — early, aggressive treatment is essential
  • Plastic surgery / microsurgery consultation mandatory for infected flaps

Timeline: Typical onset 24 hours to 10 days post-therapy; delayed presentations up to 26 days have been documented. Maintain high index of suspicion throughout the follow-up period.

Allergic Reaction Protocol

Three-tier escalating protocol based on reaction severity. Most reactions are local (itching/erythema at bite site) and do not require therapy discontinuation.

Tier 1 — Local Reaction (Most Common)

Localized itching, erythema, or urticaria confined to the bite site and immediate vicinity.

ActionDetails
Oral antihistamineCetirizine 10 mg PO or diphenhydramine 25–50 mg PO
Topical steroidHydrocortisone 1% cream after 24h (not on open wound)
Cold compress15 minutes PRN; cloth barrier between ice and skin
DocumentationRecord reaction type and treatment in chart
Future therapyNOT a contraindication — premedicate with antihistamine for future sessions

Tier 2 — Generalized Reaction

Diffuse urticaria, angioedema distant from bite site, generalized itching, GI symptoms, or mild respiratory symptoms.

ActionDetails
Discontinue therapyRemove any remaining leeches using alcohol stimulation; do not force-pull
Diphenhydramine50 mg IM (faster onset than PO)
Methylprednisolone125 mg IV push (prevents biphasic reaction)
ObservationMinimum 4 hours monitoring for progression or biphasic reaction
Future therapyRelative contraindication — allergy/immunology referral before considering retreatment

Tier 3 — Anaphylaxis

Hypotension, bronchospasm, laryngeal edema, cardiovascular collapse, loss of consciousness.

ActionDetails
1. Epinephrine0.3 mg IM (anterolateral thigh); repeat q5–15 min PRN
2. Emergency codeCall 911 / activate code team; position patient supine with legs elevated
3. IV access2 large-bore IVs (16–18G); NS 1–2L rapid infusion
4. OxygenHigh-flow O2 via non-rebreather mask (15 L/min)
5. AntihistaminesDiphenhydramine 50 mg IV + famotidine 20 mg IV (H1 + H2 blockade)
6. BronchospasmAlbuterol 2.5 mg nebulized; repeat q20 min PRN
7. SteroidsMethylprednisolone 125 mg IV (prevents biphasic)
8. DispositionICU admission for monitoring minimum 12–24 hours
Future therapyABSOLUTE CONTRAINDICATION to future leech therapy

Consultation Triggers

ScenarioConsultAction / Threshold
Hgb <7 g/dL (or <8 in CAD)Blood bank / Transfusion medicineTransfuse pRBC; type & crossmatch; reassess leech therapy frequency
Refractory bleeding (Step 4–5)HematologyCoagulopathy workup; DIC screen; reversal agents; aminocaproic acid
Suspected Aeromonas infectionInfectious DiseaseCulture-directed therapy; MDR management; antibiogram review
Tissue necrosis or flap compromisePlastic Surgery / MicrosurgerySurgical debridement; flap revision; vascular re-exploration
Anaphylaxis or severe allergic reactionAllergy/Immunology + ICUAcute management per Tier 3 protocol; future leech therapy CI evaluation
INR >3.0 or aPTT >2x normalHematology / CardiologyAnticoagulation management; bridge therapy; reversal consideration
Persistent leech refusal (surgical)Primary surgical teamTissue viability assessment; Doppler evaluation; consider surgical re-exploration
Pediatric patientPediatricsWeight-based dosing for antibiotics and analgesics; smaller leech selection; parental consent
Elderly patient (>65 years)Geriatrics / Primary CarePolypharmacy review (anticoagulants, antiplatelets); renal dose adjustment for antibiotics (CrCl-based); reduced blood volume tolerance; baseline CBC with lower transfusion threshold; fall risk assessment if ambulatory

Follow-Up Schedule

TimepointAssessmentActions
24 hoursWound status; bleeding cessation; vital signsRemove initial dressing; clean wounds; photograph. CBC if surgical/inpatient. Confirm antibiotics ongoing
72 hours (3 days)Wound healing; infection screening; anemiaAssess for erythema, drainage, warmth (Aeromonas onset peak). Repeat CBC if serial protocol. Photograph wounds
1 weekWound healing trajectory; delayed infectionClinical photograph for record. Assess for late infection signs. Evaluate pain/function improvement (MSK patients). Suture removal if placed
2 weeksFinal wound assessment; scarringWounds should be fully epithelialized. Assess Y-shaped scar formation. Document final wound status photograph
4 weeksScar maturation; late infection surveillanceLate Aeromonas infection can present up to 26 days post-therapy. Final scar assessment. Functional outcome evaluation for MSK patients. Case closure documentation

Documentation: Pre-Procedure Checklist

Complete before initiating leech application. All items must be verified and documented.

Patient Screening

Indication for leech therapy documented
Bleeding disorder screening completed (hemophilia, vWD, thrombocytopenia, hepatic coagulopathy)
Hepatic/renal function assessed
Immune status evaluated (immunosuppressants, HIV, transplant)
Cardiovascular history / anticoagulation status reviewed
Diabetes screening (type, HbA1c, neuropathy)
Prior leech therapy history obtained (reactions, infections, sensitization)

Allergy Review

Fluoroquinolone (ciprofloxacin) allergy: YES / NO — type: ___________
Sulfonamide (TMP-SMX) allergy: YES / NO — type: ___________
Leech saliva / hirudin allergy: YES / NO
Latex allergy: YES / NO (use nitrile gloves regardless)

Laboratory

CBC obtained — Hgb: ___ g/dL Plt: ___K Date: ___
PT/INR obtained — INR: ___ Date: ___
Type & Screen current (<72h) [surgical/inpatient only]
BMP obtained [multi-day protocols]
Blood cultures drawn if febrile (active sepsis = absolute CI)

Medications & Consent

Anticoagulant/antiplatelet medications reviewed; holds coordinated if applicable
Prophylactic antibiotics ordered and administered BEFORE first leech
Written informed consent obtained and signed (see Consent section)
Patient verbalized understanding of Y-scar, bleeding, infection risk, transfusion possibility

Equipment Verification

Room temperature 22–25°C confirmed
Leeches inspected (quality criteria met, <30 days since receipt)
Emergency supplies present and in-date
Vital signs monitor functional
Biohazard container available; 70% ethanol for euthanasia

Documentation: Procedure SOAP Note

S — Subjective

Chief Complaint / Indication: [venous congestion of ___ flap / knee OA pain / etc.]

Pain Level (Pre-procedure): NRS ___/10

Patient Understanding: Consent reviewed; patient verbalizes understanding of procedure, risks, alternatives, and right to refuse.

Relevant HPI: [surgical date, flap type, current tissue status, symptom duration]

O — Objective

Vital Signs (Pre): BP ___/___ HR ___ SpO2 ___% Temp ___°C

Labs: Hgb ___ g/dL Plt ___K INR ___ aPTT ___

Site Assessment (Pre): [color, turgor, cap refill, Doppler, temperature, edema]

Leeches Applied: ___ leeches, size: ___ cm, to [anatomic location(s)]

Attachment Time: ___:___ to ___:___ (duration: ___ min each)

Feeding Behavior: [normal peristalsis / sluggish / refusal — if refusal, number tried]

Detachment: Spontaneous / Stimulated (method: ___)

Blood Loss Estimate: ___ mL (feeding + oozing)

Site Assessment (Post): [color improvement, bleeding status, tissue viability]

Vital Signs (Post): BP ___/___ HR ___ SpO2 ___%

Pain Level (Post): NRS ___/10

Photographs: Pre and post procedure images obtained: YES / NO

A — Assessment

Diagnosis: [Venous congestion of ___ flap, status post leech therapy session #___ / Knee OA, treated with leech therapy]

Response: [Improvement in tissue color/turgor/cap refill / Pain reduction from ___/10 to ___/10]

Complications: [None / Excessive bleeding / Refusal to attach / Allergic reaction — describe]

P — Plan

Next Session: [___ leeches in ___ hours / Single session complete]

Antibiotics: Continue cipro ___ mg BID + TMP-SMX DS BID × ___ days post-last leech

Monitoring: [Hct q___h / Vital signs q___min / Wound check q___h]

Pain: Acetaminophen ___ mg q___h PRN. Avoid NSAIDs × 48h.

Wound Care: Dry gauze dressing; do not remove × 24h; add layers if saturated

Follow-up: [24h wound check / 72h infection screen / 1 week assessment]

Disposition: [Remain inpatient for serial therapy / Discharge with instructions]

Documentation: Post-Procedure Order Set

CategoryOrder
ActivityBed rest with affected area elevated above heart level. Bathroom privileges with assistance. No ambulation unassisted × 4h post-procedure (orthostatic risk).
DietRegular diet. Encourage oral hydration ≥2L/day to support volume status. NPO if surgical re-exploration anticipated.
Medications — AntibioticsContinue ciprofloxacin 500 mg PO BID + TMP-SMX DS PO BID. Duration: through treatment course + 24–48h after last leech.
Medications — PainAcetaminophen 1000 mg PO/IV q6h scheduled (max 4g/day). PRN: oxycodone 5 mg PO q4-6h for pain >5/10. AVOID NSAIDs × 48h, aspirin × 7 days.
Medications — ItchingCetirizine 10 mg PO daily PRN itching. Diphenhydramine 25–50 mg PO q6h PRN severe itching (warn: sedation). Hydrocortisone 1% cream to bite sites after 24h.
Monitoring — Vitalsq30min during active feeding; q2h × 6h post-detachment; q4h thereafter (inpatient). Pre/post only (outpatient).
Monitoring — LabsCBC q4–8h (serial inpatient protocol). STAT CBC if bleeding concerns or hemodynamic changes.
TransfusionType & Screen current. Transfuse pRBC for Hgb <7 g/dL (or <8 if CAD). FFP if INR >1.5 with active bleeding. Platelets if <50K with active bleeding.
Wound CareDry gauze dressing over bite sites; do not remove × 24h. Add gauze layers over saturated dressing. Absorbent underpads under treatment area. No compression wraps.
Notification TriggersNotify physician for: HR >100 or <50; SBP <90; SpO2 <92%; Temp >38°C; Hgb <7; bleeding saturating >10 pads/4h; rash/urticaria; signs of anaphylaxis; patient distress.
Discharge Criteria (Outpatient)Vitals stable; bleeding manageable; patient demonstrates dressing management; written discharge instructions provided; antibiotic prescription in hand; follow-up scheduled within 72h.

Documentation: Patient Discharge Instructions

Provide in written form at discharge. Use plain language appropriate to patient literacy level.

Bleeding — What Is Normal

  • Your bite wounds will ooze blood for 4 to 10 hours after the leeches are removed. This is normal and expected.
  • The bleeding will gradually slow down and stop completely within 12–24 hours.
  • Add clean gauze pads on top of your bandage if it becomes soaked. Do NOT remove the bottom layer for 24 hours.
  • Place a towel or absorbent pad under the treated area to protect your bedding and clothing.

Antibiotics — Very Important

  • Take ALL prescribed antibiotics exactly as directed. Do not skip doses.
  • Continue antibiotics for the full course, even if you feel fine.
  • Antibiotics prevent a specific bacterial infection (Aeromonas) that lives in the leech.
  • Take with food if you experience nausea. If you develop a rash, hives, or difficulty breathing, stop the medication and call your doctor or go to the ER immediately.

Pain Management

  • Take acetaminophen (Tylenol) for pain: 500–1000 mg every 6 hours as needed (max 4000 mg/day).
  • Do NOT take ibuprofen (Advil/Motrin), naproxen (Aleve), or aspirin for at least 48 hours — these increase bleeding.
  • If prescribed a stronger pain medication, use it only as directed.

Itching

  • Itching at the bite sites is very common (happens in up to 75% of patients) and is NOT an allergic emergency.
  • Take cetirizine (Zyrtec) 10 mg daily or diphenhydramine (Benadryl) 25–50 mg every 6 hours.
  • After 24 hours, you may apply hydrocortisone 1% cream to the bite sites.
  • Do not scratch the bite sites — this can cause infection.

Follow-Up Appointments

  • 72 hours (3 days): Wound check and infection screening
  • 1 week: Healing assessment and photographs
  • 2 weeks: Final wound evaluation
  • Keep all scheduled appointments even if everything seems fine

Go to the Emergency Room Immediately If:

  • Bleeding that will not stop after 10 hours of firm pressure
  • Soaking through more than 10 gauze pads in 4 hours
  • Feeling faint, dizzy, lightheaded, or having a racing heartbeat
  • Fever above 100.4°F (38°C)
  • Increasing redness, swelling, warmth, or pus at the bite sites (especially after 48 hours)
  • Red streaks spreading from the bite sites
  • Rash, hives, swelling of face/throat, or difficulty breathing

About Your Scars

Each leech leaves a small Y-shaped mark approximately 2–3 mm in size. These marks are initially red but will fade over several months to become faint, pale scars. They are permanent but typically barely noticeable once fully healed. Avoid sun exposure to healing bite sites for 3–6 months to minimize scar darkening.

Evidence Summary

The following table summarizes the key studies informing these clinical protocols. Evidence spans systematic reviews, randomized controlled trials, prospective cohorts, and expert consensus guidelines.

Clinical Protocol Evidence Base — Key Studies
StudyDesignPopulation (n=)InterventionKey OutcomeResult
Whitaker et al.
2012
Systematic reviewPlastic/reconstructive surgery patients across 67 publications (1966-2009)
(n=277)
Leech therapy with variable prophylaxis (79% received antibiotics)Infection rate, salvage rate, transfusion rate78% overall salvage; 49.75% transfusion rate; infection drops salvage from 88.3% to 37.4%
Landmark review. 14.4% infection rate. 21.8% overall complication rate. 54.29% used concomitant anticoagulation
Herlin et al.
2017
Systematic review + retrospective cohortFree flap patients requiring leech therapy
(n=49)
Ciprofloxacin + TMP-SMX dual prophylaxisInfection rate and flap salvage83.7% salvage; low infection rate with dual therapy
Established cipro + TMP-SMX as &quot;most relevant&quot; prophylaxis regimen
Michalsen et al.
2003
Randomized controlled trialPatients with symptomatic knee osteoarthritis
(n=51)
Single session of 4 leeches applied periarticularPain (VAS), function (WOMAC), at 7 and 28 daysSignificant pain reduction sustained at 28 days; NNT 1.5 at day 7
First RCT of leech therapy for OA; seminal study
Michalsen et al.
2008
Randomized controlled trialPatients with thumb carpometacarpal (CMC-1) osteoarthritis
(n=32)
2-3 leeches applied to CMC-1 joint, single sessionPain, function, and grip strength at 7 and 28 daysSignificant improvement in pain and function vs. topical diclofenac
Michalsen et al.
2018
Randomized controlled trialPatients with chronic low back pain
(n=44)
4-7 leeches applied paravertebral, single sessionPain (VAS), disability (ODI), at 28 daysClinically significant pain reduction vs. back-care education control
Backer et al.
2011
Randomized controlled trialPatients with lateral epicondylitis (tennis elbow)
(n=52)
2-4 leeches applied to lateral epicondyle, single sessionPain (VAS), grip strength, DASH score at 7 and 28 daysSignificant pain reduction and functional improvement vs. topical diclofenac
Giltner et al.
2013
Case report + genomic analysisPatient with ciprofloxacin-resistant Aeromonas infection post-leech therapy
(n=1)
Culture-directed antibiotic therapy after cipro failureClinical course and resistance mechanism identificationCipro resistance confirmed; PMQR genes identified; successful treatment with alternative agents
Highlighted need for dual-agent prophylaxis and batch surveillance
Palm et al.
2022
Institutional protocol studyHigh-volume leech therapy center (&gt;50 leeches/month)
(n=NR)
Batch culture surveillance protocol for incoming leech shipmentsAntibiotic resistance patterns and protocol complianceIdentified variable resistance patterns between batches; informed empiric prophylaxis selection
Model for institutional surveillance programs
Mumcuoglu et al.
2014
Expert consensus + literature reviewPractitioners of medicinal leech therapy across all indications
(n=NR)
Comprehensive clinical recommendations for leech useStandardized protocols for selection, application, monitoring, and disposalPublished definitive best-practice guidelines covering facility, technique, and safety
Most-cited procedural reference for medicinal leech therapy
Lineaweaver et al.
1992
Multicenter case seriesReplantation and flap surgery patients with Aeromonas infection
(n=10)
Documentation of post-leech Aeromonas infections across centersInfection timing, severity spectrum, and tissue outcomesOnset 24h to &gt;10 days; severity from minor wound to tissue loss/sepsis
Established the mandate for routine antibiotic prophylaxis
Nguyen et al.
2012
Prospective case seriesPatients receiving leech therapy with standardized prophylaxis protocol
(n=39)
Universal prophylactic antibiotics per standardized protocolAeromonas infection rate0% infection rate (0/39 patients)
Demonstrated that standardized prophylaxis can eliminate Aeromonas infection
Sig et al.
2017
Meta-analysisPatients with knee osteoarthritis across RCTs and comparative studies
(n=237)
Leech therapy (4-8 leeches, single or repeated sessions)Pooled pain reduction (VAS) and function (WOMAC)Statistically significant pain reduction (SMD -1.05) and functional improvement
Strongest pooled evidence for musculoskeletal leech therapy

Key Takeaways

Clinical Essentials

  1. Antibiotics before first leech: Ciprofloxacin 500 mg BID + TMP-SMX DS BID is the standard of care. Without prophylaxis, Aeromonas infection rates are 7–20%.
  2. Never force-pull: Forcible removal risks Aeromonas regurgitation into the wound, tooth avulsion, and tissue trauma.
  3. Blood loss is cumulative: 15–65 mL per leech. Serial protocols may cause 2–5 liters cumulative loss. 49.75% of surgical patients need transfusion.
  4. Consent is the highest legal risk: Document nature, benefits, common side effects (6), serious risks (4 with statistics), and alternatives (5).
  5. No antiseptics on application site: Clean with warm water ONLY. Alcohol, betadine, and chlorhexidine prevent attachment.

Monitoring & Safety

  1. Hematocrit q4–8h in serial surgical protocols. Transfuse at Hgb <7 (or <8 in CAD).
  2. Cipro resistance up to 43%: Dual-agent prophylaxis is recommended. Batch surveillance for institutions using >50 leeches/month.
  3. Aeromonas onset up to 26 days: Maintain infection surveillance through the 4-week follow-up visit.
  4. Itching is not allergy: 37–75% incidence. Treat with antihistamines. True anaphylaxis is rare (<1%) but requires permanent contraindication.
  5. Avoid NSAIDs × 48h, aspirin × 7 days: Both prolong the anticoagulant effect of injected hirudin and increase bleeding risk.

Recursos relacionados

Este sitio web proporciona información educativa y no constituye consejo médico, diagnóstico ni recomendaciones de tratamiento. La terapia con sanguijuelas medicinales conlleva riesgos clínicamente significativos y debe ser realizada únicamente por profesionales calificados bajo protocolos aprobados institucionalmente. La autorización 510(k) de la FDA para sanguijuelas medicinales se limita a indicaciones específicas; las discusiones sobre uso investigativo y fuera de indicación se señalan correspondientemente. Para orientación médica específica, consulte a un profesional de salud calificado.