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Retrospective Review of Eighteen Patients Who Underwent Transtibial Amputation for Intractable Pain
Nicholas Honkamp, BS; Annunziato Amendola, MD; Shepard Hurwitz, MD; Charles L. Saltzman, MD
View Disclosures and Other Information
Investigation performed at the University of Iowa, Iowa City, Iowa, the University of Western Ontario, London, Ontario, Canada, and the University of Virginia, Charlottesville, Virginia
Nicholas Honkamp, BS
Annunziato Amendola, MD
Charles L. Saltzman, MD
Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, University of Iowa, 200 Hawkins Drive, Iowa City, IA 52242

Shepard Hurwitz, MD
Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, University of Virginia, Box 159, Charlottesville, VA 22908

The authors did not receive grants or outside funding in support of their research or preparation of this manuscript. They did not receive payments or other benefits or a commitment or agreement to provide such benefits from a commercial entity. No commercial entity paid or directed, or agreed to pay or direct, any benefits to any research fund, foundation, educational institution, or other charitable or nonprofit organization with which the authors are affiliated or associated.

The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery.  2001; 83:1479-1483 
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Abstract

Background: Amputations are rarely performed solely for pain relief because of concerns regarding the persistence of pain and disability after the procedure. The purpose of this study was to assess the outcome of below-the-knee amputations performed to relieve intractable foot and ankle pain.

Methods: A chart review was conducted to identify all below-the-knee amputations that had been performed for the treatment of chronic foot and ankle pain by three orthopaedic foot and ankle specialists at three institutions. The inclusion criteria included (1) intractable foot or ankle pain as the surgical indication, (2) failure of maximal medical therapy, (3) failure of prior surgical reconstruction, and (4) a minimum follow-up period of twenty-four months after below-the-knee amputation. Patients with diabetes mellitus, peripheral vascular occlusive disease, or peripheral neuropathy were excluded. Each participant completed a two-part questionnaire with regard to the levels of disability, function, pain, and recreational activity both before and after the amputation.

Results: Twenty patients met the inclusion criteria, and eighteen completed the study. The study group included four women and fourteen men who had an average age of forty-two years (range, twenty-six to sixty-one years) and were followed for an average of forty-one months (range, twenty-five to eighty-five months) after the amputation. When asked whether they would have the below-the-knee amputation done again under similar circumstances, sixteen patients said yes, one was unsure, and one said no. The same distribution was observed when the patients were asked whether they were satisfied with the outcome: sixteen said yes, one was unsure, and one said no. Disability, pain, and recreational status were assessed with a 10-cm visual analog scale. After the amputation, the patients reported a decrease in both pain frequency (with the average score improving from 9.8 to 1.7; p < 0.0001) and pain intensity (with the average score improving from 8.4 to 2.6; p < 0.0001). Ten patients discontinued the use of narcotics, and seven decreased the level and/or dosage. Three patients worked before the amputation, and eight worked after the amputation. The average walking distance increased from 0.3 to 0.8 mile (p = 0.0034).

Conclusion: In selected patients, a below-the-knee amputation may be a good salvage procedure for intractable foot and ankle pain that is unresponsive to all medical and local surgical reconstructive techniques.

Figures in this Article
    In 1871, Mitchell1 used the term "phantom limb" to describe the commonly reported sensation that an amputated limb is still present. In the intervening years, many studies have been performed to evaluate pain, including phantom-limb pain, after amputation2-8. Those studies excluded patients who had the procedure because of debilitating pain, and therefore they cannot be used to assess the effectiveness of amputations performed for pain relief. Today, surgeons are reluctant to consider amputation of a chronically painful extremity because of the belief that pain will persist or intensify after amputation. Katz and Melzack4 based their concept of "somatosensory memories" on a series of eight patients who had undergone amputation for undescribed indications, six of whom described phantom-limb sensations that were similar to preamputation pain. Other reports have seemingly corroborated the findings of Katz and Melzack; however, those studies generally excluded patients who requested elective amputation for the treatment of intractable pain2,3,5-15.
    The purpose of the present study was to assess the outcome of below-the-knee amputations performed in selected patients who had intractable foot and ankle pain. Our hypothesis was that patients would have significant relief of pain and a measurable increase of functional capability after amputation.
    The study was approved by the institutional review board at the institution of the lead investigator (C.L.S.) and was performed at three participating institutions. Patients were included in the study if (1) a below-the-knee amputation had been performed because of intractable foot or ankle pain, (2) maximal medical therapy had failed to alleviate the pain, (3) the limb was considered surgically unreconstructible by an orthopaedic foot and ankle specialist, and (4) there was a minimum follow-up period of twenty-four months after the amputation. Patients with diabetes mellitus, peripheral vascular occlusive disease, or peripheral neuropathy were excluded. Each patient had pain that was limited to the foot and ankle area, which allowed a standard below-the-knee amputation. There were no surgical complications, and a standard posterior flap was used in all patients.
    All patients were contacted initially so that they could be informed of the study and asked to participate. After verbal consent had been received, a questionnaire regarding surgical outcome was either sent to the patient or administered over the telephone.

    Questionnaire

    The questionnaire consisted of two similar parts, each of which was two pages long. The first part focused on preoperative pain and function, and the second part focused on postoperative pain and function. The questionnaire was adapted from standardized instruments16-18 and was used to assess the patient’s level of pain, need for analgesic medication, days missed from work, recreational status, satisfaction with the procedure, and willingness to have the amputation performed again under similar circumstances. The questionnaire required short written (or verbal) answers; "yes," "no," or "not applicable" answers; and use of standardized 10-cm visual analog scales that had positive and negative word anchors on opposite ends. A score of 0.0 represented a favorable outcome ("no pain" or "completely able"), whereas a score of 10.0 represented a poor outcome ("constant pain" or "completely unable").
    The two-part questionnaire consisted of the following sections.

    General

    The questionnaire assessed the patient’s general response to the below-the-knee amputation, perceived disability (with a score of 0.0 representing "completely normal" and a score of 10.0 representing "completely disabled"), and work status. The patient was specifically asked whether he or she was "satisfied with the results" of the amputation; whether he or she would, "under similar circumstances, have the amputation done again"; and whether any other treatment had been required since the time of the amputation.

    Pain

    The first part of the questionnaire asked the patient to rate, with use of a visual analog scale, the frequency and intensity of preoperative pain as well as the degree to which the pain had hindered daily life before the amputation (with 0.0 representing "never" and 10.0 representing "completely"). The second part of the questionnaire asked the patient to rate, with use of a visual analog scale, the frequency and intensity of phantom-limb pain, the frequency of phantom-limb sensations, and the degree to which the phantom-limb pain hindered daily life at the time of the latest follow-up.
    The patients’ medical records were reviewed for the six-month period immediately prior to the amputation and for the six-month period immediately prior to the last follow-up. From these records and from the responses to the completed questionnaires, we determined, for each patient, the number of physician visits and the usage of analgesic medications for leg or foot pain. We stratified medication use according to the United States Drug Enforcement Agency’s schedule for narcotic classification.

    Recreation

    Both the preoperative and postoperative portions of the questionnaire asked the patient to rate his or her ability to use public facilities (restaurants, malls, and so on) and to estimate how often he or she was forced to withdraw from social activities because of severe pain. Both portions also included questions on walking distance, the ability to drive a car, and the level of ability to participate in sports and recreational activities.

    Statistical Methods

    The Wilcoxon rank-sum test was used to determine whether there were significant differences between the preoperative and postoperative scores for pain, recreation, and general disability. The McNemar test was used to analyze any difference between the preoperative and postoperative responses regarding the use of pain medication, the ability to drive a car, the ability to participate in sports and recreational activities, and employment status. The Spearman coefficient was used to determine any significant correlations between the variables of age, gender, and duration of follow-up. A p value of <0.05 was considered significant.
    Of the twenty patients who met the inclusion criteria, eighteen were located and agreed to participate. Fourteen patients completed the written questionnaire, and four were evaluated with use of a telephone interview. The four women and fourteen men had an average age of forty-two years (range, twenty-six to sixty-one years) at the time of the latest follow-up, which was performed at an average of forty-one months (range, twenty-five to eighty-five months) after the amputation. The patients had had an average of 6.2 operations (range, one to twenty operations) before the amputation. The history of each patient’s injury and diagnosis before amputation, as recorded from the hospital charts, is listed in the Appendix.
    Two patients were not included in the study. The first patient was a man who had the amputation because of recurrent painful infection and ulceration related to acromegaly and overgrowth of osseous elements. He was followed for approximately three years, during which time the pain decreased and function greatly improved. The patient then moved out of state and was lost to follow-up. Attempts to locate this patient were successful, but he declined to be interviewed. The second patient was a woman who was doing well at the time of her initial enrollment in the study, eleven months after the amputation. She was initially able to run while wearing the prosthesis but then became dissatisfied with her performance and sought additional care. After the patient found several custom-made prostheses to be unacceptable, she had an Ertl procedure with resection and proximal transposition of a tibial neuroma stump approximately thirty months after the amputation. She subsequently moved out of state but, at the time of writing, reported that she was pleased with her outcome and was able to perform her activities without pain.

    General

    When the patients were asked whether they would have the below-the-knee amputation again under similar circumstances, sixteen said yes, one was unsure, and one said no. The same distribution was observed when the patients were asked whether they were satisfied with the outcome (sixteen said yes, one was unsure, and one said no).
    Patients reported a decrease in their overall disability, with the average score improving from 8.4 to 3.7 (p = 0.0001). Three patients had worked full time before the amputation, and all three returned to full-time work after the amputation. In addition, five patients who had been unable to work before the amputation gained full-time employment postoperatively. The main reasons mentioned by the ten patients who did not return to full-time employment included other health problems (four patients), increased but continued pain and disability related to the amputated limb (two patients), prosthetic complications (two patients), an inability to walk long distances (one patient), and a chronic shoulder injury (one patient).
    Two patients required additional local care after the below-the-knee amputation. One patient had resection of the proximal part of the fibula because of painful proximal tibiofibular syndesmotic instability and related difficulties with prosthetic fitting. A second patient required dermatological treatment of a rash that developed on the stump.
    Patients reported that the most difficult problem that they faced after the amputation was maintaining an adequately fitted prosthesis.

    Pain

    Visual-analog-scale scores were used to compare the patients’ preoperative and postoperative perceptions of pain. Patients reported a decrease in the degree to which their pain hindered their activities, with the average score improving from 8.8 preoperatively to 1.3 postoperatively (p < 0.0001). They also reported a decrease in both pain frequency (with the average score improving from 9.8 to 1.7; p < 0.0001) and pain intensity (with the average score improving from 8.4 to 2.6; p < 0.0001). We calculated an "overall pain" measure for each patient as the product of the frequency and intensity scores. Patients reported a decrease in overall pain, with the average score improving from 82 (of a possible 100) preoperatively to 8.7 postoperatively (p < 0.0001).
    The patients required an average of 6.6 office visits for pain or limb care in the six months before the amputation, compared with an average of 1.9 office visits during the most recent six-month period (p < 0.0001). Of the nine patients who had been taking schedule-II narcotics preoperatively, one continued their use postoperatively at a lower frequency, two required lower doses of a schedule-III narcotic, and six required no medication. Similarly, of the eight patients who had been taking schedule-III narcotics preoperatively, one continued their postoperative use at a lower frequency, two switched to schedule-IV narcotics, one switched to aspirin, and four required no pain medication. The one patient who had been taking ibuprofen preoperatively required no medication at the time of follow-up.
    At the time of follow-up, fifteen of the eighteen patients experienced phantom-limb sensations, with an average frequency rating of 3.1 on the 10-cm visual analog scale.

    Activity

    Patients reported an improved ability to walk and to function in public places after the amputation, with the average score decreasing from 6.4 to 2.0 (p < 0.0001). They also reported a decreased tendency to withdraw from social activities because of pain, with the average score improving from 6.2 to 1.4 (p = 0.0002). Three patients who had participated in sports and recreational activities before the amputation continued to do so postoperatively, and six additional patients resumed sports and recreational activities that they had discontinued before amputation. The average distance that the patients were able to walk increased from 0.3 mile preoperatively to 0.8 mile postoperatively (p = 0.0034). Seventeen patients had been able to drive before the amputation, and all eighteen were able to do so after the amputation.
    The present retrospective cohort study demonstrated substantial improvement in patient outcomes after below-the-knee amputations performed for intractable foot and ankle pain in limbs that were considered unreconstructible. The patients were generally selected for treatment with amputation after the surgeon had (1) identified, in most cases, an anatomically discrete cause of pain, (2) exhausted all nonoperative means of treatment, and (3) carefully assessed the patient’s mental and emotional status to determine the likelihood of improvement after amputation. The latter evaluation was not done in a standardized manner, but rather as part of the routine clinical assessment. During this assessment period, there were other patients with intractable foot and ankle pain who either were not willing to have an amputation or were considered unlikely to improve with amputation.
    A weakness of the retrospective cohort study design was that we asked the patients to estimate their preamputation condition at an average of three years after the procedure. The average preamputation scores on the visual analog scales regarding the intensity and frequency of pain were 8.4 and 9.8, respectively, for a computed overall pain score of 82 (of a possible 100) points. Although these numbers are subject to recall bias, they cannot be entirely discounted, given that the major reason for amputation was severe pain. Similar visual analog scales or ordinal scales have been used in previous studies to compare preamputation and postamputation pain in a retrospective manner8,13-15,19. The visual analog scale that we used in this study is reliable and well validated for the assessment of foot and ankle pain16-18.
    Many studies have been performed to assess the levels of pain and function in amputees4-10,12-15,20, but none of those studies focused specifically on the results of below-the-knee amputations performed because of intractable pain due to a posttraumatic, degenerative, or anatomically focal pathological condition of the foot or ankle. The relevance of the information derived from studies of patients with different disease processes, different indications for amputation, and different levels of amputation is uncertain.
    Similar levels of pain frequency and intensity have been documented in studies of amputations due to trauma. In an analysis of 2694 amputees who were veterans of the United States military, Sherman et al.14 reported that 78% of the individuals had some phantom pain and, of those, 56% reported that their pain decreased or resolved completely. No correlation was noted between the preamputation level of pain, the development of phantom pain, and the ultimate level of pain. In a similar analysis of 526 amputees who were veterans of the British military, Wartan et al.8 reported that 55% of the individuals had some phantom pain and, of those, 53% reported that the pain decreased or resolved completely. Both of those studies, however, included both upper and lower extremity amputations as well as amputations proximal and distal to the knee. Thus, comparability with the cohort in the present study is limited.
    Two previous studies focused on severe pain similar to that reported by the patients in the present study. Browder and Gallagher20 found that twelve (46%) of twenty-six patients had persistent phantom-limb pain, but they provided little qualitative information regarding either preamputation or phantom-limb pain. Parkes5, in a study of forty-six patients with both upper and lower extremity amputations, found that 50% of the patients had persistent phantom-limb pain. The persistence of phantom-limb pain was correlated with unemployment, persistent illness, and a rigid, self-reliant personality.
    Despite differences in injury mechanism, amputation level, and both preamputation and postamputation data, many studies have supported the notion that the frequency and/or intensity of pain can decrease after amputation4-6,8,12-15,20. No studies, to our knowledge, have focused purely on below-the-knee amputations performed because of intractable foot and ankle pain in unreconstructible limbs. In addition, none have demonstrated the dramatic decrease in pain frequency and intensity or the significant increase in function reported by the patients in the present study. The differences in our results may be related to patient selection, the disease process, or consistent skewing of the results within the relatively small sample size of only eighteen patients. Other factors, such as personality and social status, have been shown to influence outcome after amputation12. It is noteworthy that the patient who reported the worst outcome in the present study (and answered "no" to the questions regarding satisfaction with the outcome and willingness to undergo the procedure again) was the only patient who was involved in litigation related to the foot or ankle.
    The patients in this study did remarkably well. On the average, they had far less pain, required less medication, and were able to resume a more normal life after the amputation. Given the chronicity of the symptoms and the failure of all other surgical and medical treatments, the results of these amputations are truly remarkable. Because of the irreversible nature of below-the-knee amputation and the substantial lifetime impairment with which it is associated, rigorous prospective studies are needed in order to better predict improvement in the quality of life of those who might benefit from the procedure.
    A table showing specific demographic and study data is available with the electronic versions of this article, on our web site at www.jbjs.org (go to the article citation and click on "Supplementary Material") and on our CD-ROM (call 781-449-9780, ext. 140, to order).
    Mitchell SW. Phantom limbs. Lippincott’s Mag.,1871;8: 563-9. 8563  1871 
     
    Appenzeller O,Bicknell JM. Effects of nervous system lesions on phantom experience in amputees. Neurology,1969;19: 141-6. 19141  1969  [PubMed]
     
    Carlen PL, Wall PD, Nadvorna H,Steinbach T. Phantom limbs and related phenomena in recent traumatic amputations. Neurology,1978;28: 211-7. 28211  1978  [PubMed]
     
    Katz J,Melzack R. Pain ‘memories’ in phantom limbs: review and clinical observations. Pain,1990;43: 319-36. 43319  1990  [PubMed]
     
    Parkes CM. Factors determining the persistence of phantom pain in the amputee. J Psychosom Res,1973;17: 97-108. 1797  1973  [PubMed]
     
    Purry NA,Hannon MA. How successful is below-knee amputation for injury?. Injury,1989;20: 32-6. 2032  1989  [PubMed]
     
    Sherman RA,Sherman CJ. A comparison of phantom sensations among amputees whose amputations were of civilian and military origins. Pain,1985;21: 91-7. 2191  1985  [PubMed]
     
    Wartan SW, Hamann W, Wedley JR,McColl I. Phantom pain and sensation among British veteran amputees. Br J Anaesth,1997;78: 652-9. 78652  1997  [PubMed]
     
    Jensen TS, Krebs B, Nielsen J,Rasmussen P. Phantom limb, phantom pain and stump pain in amputees during the first 6 months following limb amputation. Pain,1983;17: 243-56. 17243  1983  [PubMed]
     
    Jensen TS, Krebs B, Nielsen J,Rasmussen P. Immediate and long-term phantom limb pain in amputees: incidence, clinical characteristics and relationship to pre-amputation limb pain. Pain,1985;21: 267-78. 21267  1985  [PubMed]
     
    Katz J,Melzack R. Referred sensations in chronic pain patients. Pain,1987;28: 51-9. 2851  1987  [PubMed]
     
    Krane EJ,Heller LB. The prevalence of phantom sensation and pain in pediatric amputees. J Pain Symptom Manage,1995;10: 21-9. 1021  1995  [PubMed]
     
    Nikolajsen L, Ilkjaer S, Kroner K, Christensen J,Jensen TS. The influence of preamputation pain on postamputation stump and phantom pain. Pain,1997;72: 393-405. 72393  1997  [PubMed]
     
    Sherman RA, Sherman CJ,Parker L. Chronic phantom and stump pain among American veterans: results of a survey. Pain,1984;18: 83-95. 1883  1984  [PubMed]
     
    Smith DG, Horn P, Malchow D, Boone DA, Reiber GE,Hansen ST Jr. Prosthetic history, prosthetic changes, and functional outcome of the isolated, traumatic below-knee amputee. J Trauma,1995;38: 44-7. 3844  1995  [PubMed]
     
    Budiman-Mak E, Conrad KJ,Roach KE. The Foot Function Index: a measure of foot pain and disability. J Clin Epidemiol,1991;44: 561-70. 44561  1991  [PubMed]
     
    Domsic RT,Saltzman CL. Ankle osteoarthritis scale. Foot Ankle Int,1998;19: 466-71. 19466  1998  [PubMed]
     
    Saag KG, Saltzman CL, Brown CK,Budiman-Mak E. The Foot Function Index for measuring rheumatoid arthritis pain: evaluating side-to-side reliability. Foot Ankle Int,1996;17: 506-10. 17506  1996  [PubMed]
     
    Houghton AD, Nicholls G, Houghton AL, Saadah E,McColl L. Phantom pain: natural history and association with rehabilitation. Ann R Coll Surg Engl,1994;76: 22-5. 7622  1994  [PubMed]
     
    Browder J,Gallagher JP. Dorsal cordotomy for painful phantom limb. Ann Surg,1948;128: 456-69. 128456  1948 
     

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    Topics

    Mitchell SW. Phantom limbs. Lippincott’s Mag.,1871;8: 563-9. 8563  1871 
     
    Appenzeller O,Bicknell JM. Effects of nervous system lesions on phantom experience in amputees. Neurology,1969;19: 141-6. 19141  1969  [PubMed]
     
    Carlen PL, Wall PD, Nadvorna H,Steinbach T. Phantom limbs and related phenomena in recent traumatic amputations. Neurology,1978;28: 211-7. 28211  1978  [PubMed]
     
    Katz J,Melzack R. Pain ‘memories’ in phantom limbs: review and clinical observations. Pain,1990;43: 319-36. 43319  1990  [PubMed]
     
    Parkes CM. Factors determining the persistence of phantom pain in the amputee. J Psychosom Res,1973;17: 97-108. 1797  1973  [PubMed]
     
    Purry NA,Hannon MA. How successful is below-knee amputation for injury?. Injury,1989;20: 32-6. 2032  1989  [PubMed]
     
    Sherman RA,Sherman CJ. A comparison of phantom sensations among amputees whose amputations were of civilian and military origins. Pain,1985;21: 91-7. 2191  1985  [PubMed]
     
    Wartan SW, Hamann W, Wedley JR,McColl I. Phantom pain and sensation among British veteran amputees. Br J Anaesth,1997;78: 652-9. 78652  1997  [PubMed]
     
    Jensen TS, Krebs B, Nielsen J,Rasmussen P. Phantom limb, phantom pain and stump pain in amputees during the first 6 months following limb amputation. Pain,1983;17: 243-56. 17243  1983  [PubMed]
     
    Jensen TS, Krebs B, Nielsen J,Rasmussen P. Immediate and long-term phantom limb pain in amputees: incidence, clinical characteristics and relationship to pre-amputation limb pain. Pain,1985;21: 267-78. 21267  1985  [PubMed]
     
    Katz J,Melzack R. Referred sensations in chronic pain patients. Pain,1987;28: 51-9. 2851  1987  [PubMed]
     
    Krane EJ,Heller LB. The prevalence of phantom sensation and pain in pediatric amputees. J Pain Symptom Manage,1995;10: 21-9. 1021  1995  [PubMed]
     
    Nikolajsen L, Ilkjaer S, Kroner K, Christensen J,Jensen TS. The influence of preamputation pain on postamputation stump and phantom pain. Pain,1997;72: 393-405. 72393  1997  [PubMed]
     
    Sherman RA, Sherman CJ,Parker L. Chronic phantom and stump pain among American veterans: results of a survey. Pain,1984;18: 83-95. 1883  1984  [PubMed]
     
    Smith DG, Horn P, Malchow D, Boone DA, Reiber GE,Hansen ST Jr. Prosthetic history, prosthetic changes, and functional outcome of the isolated, traumatic below-knee amputee. J Trauma,1995;38: 44-7. 3844  1995  [PubMed]
     
    Budiman-Mak E, Conrad KJ,Roach KE. The Foot Function Index: a measure of foot pain and disability. J Clin Epidemiol,1991;44: 561-70. 44561  1991  [PubMed]
     
    Domsic RT,Saltzman CL. Ankle osteoarthritis scale. Foot Ankle Int,1998;19: 466-71. 19466  1998  [PubMed]
     
    Saag KG, Saltzman CL, Brown CK,Budiman-Mak E. The Foot Function Index for measuring rheumatoid arthritis pain: evaluating side-to-side reliability. Foot Ankle Int,1996;17: 506-10. 17506  1996  [PubMed]
     
    Houghton AD, Nicholls G, Houghton AL, Saadah E,McColl L. Phantom pain: natural history and association with rehabilitation. Ann R Coll Surg Engl,1994;76: 22-5. 7622  1994  [PubMed]
     
    Browder J,Gallagher JP. Dorsal cordotomy for painful phantom limb. Ann Surg,1948;128: 456-69. 128456  1948 
     
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