📄 Extracted Text (453 words)
From: Sultan Bin Sulayem
To: Jeffrey Epstein <[email protected]>
Subject: Israel medical prevents diabetic foot amputation!
Date: Mon, 17 Mar 2014 04:35:11 +0000
Rambam prevents `diabetic foot' amputations By JUDY SIEGEL-ITZKOVICH
11/12/2012 03:51
New leg catheterization surgery has
in ShareInproved the lives of hundreds suffering
MI Select Language I • from diabetes.
g',DR. IGOR KOGAN performs surgery at Rambam
DR. IGOR KOGAN performs surgery at
Rambam Photo: Courtesy Rambam Medican Center Sent from my iPhone
Rambam Medical Center in Haifa said on Sunday that in the
last two years, it has saved the limbs of 521 such patients by
performing "leg catheterization" that supply blood to the
limb and keep it alive.
World Diabetes Day will be marked around the world to
increase awareness of Type II Diabetes, which affects many
millions of people around the globe and is largely due to
improper eating, obesity and lack of exercise.
Amputation of a foot or leg used to be common among
Israelis with complications from uncontrolled diabetes, with
about 1,000 such operations a year.
Diabetics with complications may suffer from "diabetic
foot" - sores that are difficult to heal and cause the limbs to
deteriorate and turn gangrenous, requiring amputation.
But catheterization makes it possible to renew blood supply
and prevent or treat infections, and the procedure can be
repeated if the problem returns, Rambam doctors said.
Rambam radiologists and interventional cardiologists have
undergone special training to perform the procedure, which
is available in only a few medical centers in the world. Dr.
Igor Kogan, a senior interventional cardiologist and head of
the radiological endovascular service at the Haifa hospital,
studied the technique abroad with the aim at removing
blockages in the vessels of the legs. He is one of the few
physicians in Israel able to perform it.
Kogan said that the increase in such procedures is due to
better awareness among diabetologists and other specialists
that legs do not necessarily have to be amputated.
More experience makes it possible for them to save legs that
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were hopeless cases before, he added.
Leg catheterization is very delicate work, as the blood
vessels are only a few millimeters in diameter. A tiny
inflatable balloon is pushed into the blood vessels and
inflated to open them so blood flow can resume and reach as
far as the bottom of the foot. The procedure, in which
orthopedics, plastic surgeons and endrocrinologists are also
involved, takes about two-and-a-half hours and requires
only sedation and local anesthesia.
After one day's hospitalization, the patient is discharged.
Rambam is one of the few centers that use carbon dioxide
rather than iodine in the procedure so that patients with
kidney problems who are sensitive to iodine will not be
harmed.
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