11/15 Peripheral Arterial Occlusive Disease - Corbett Flashcards

1
Q

peripheral arterial occlusive diseaes

A

presence of flow-limiting lesion in an artery providing blood supply to limbs

etiology

  • atherosclerosis (most common)
  • thromboembolism
  • vasculitis

15-20% pts over 70

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2
Q

blood flow to extremities

resting vs exercise

WHY

A

resting blood flow to extremities: 300-40mm/min

exercise kicks this up up to 10x

why?

  1. incr in CO
  2. compensatory vasodilation

end of exercise → return to normal flow w/in minutes

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3
Q

atherosclerotic limb

what happens in exercise?

clinical presentation

A

in general, stenotic segment reduces the pressure experienced by distal muscle groups

during exercise, the peripheral vasodilation that takes place near the distal muscle groups leads to even greater/more significant reduction in pressure

  • inadequate perfusion → can’t maintain good oxygen delivery to muscles

clinical presentation

  • claudication: pain with exertion (most common clinical manifestation of periph arterial disease)
  • rest pain
  • non-healing wounds
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4
Q

intermittent claudication

A

“reproducible ischemic muscle pain”

occurs during physical activity, relieved after short rest (2-5min, even just standing still)

need to ask!

  • 50-90% of pts who have it don’t mention it (think its a regular sx of old age)

need to quantify!

  • relate onset of pain to walking distance in terms of street blocks
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5
Q

neurogenic claudication

A

caused by spinal stenosis → progressive narrowing of spinal canal

lumbar spine:

  • pain, weakness, numbness in legs while walking
  • intensified due to incr metabolic demands of compressed nerve roots that have become ischemic due to stenosis

pain relieved when patient flexes spine by sitting!

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6
Q

correlation between location of pain and affected artery

A

anatomical location of arterial lesion is linked to location of pain

  • common: disease in distal superficial femoral artery → claudication in ankle
  • disease in aortoiliac area → claidication in thigh, buttock & male erectile dysfx
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7
Q

risk factors: peripheral arterial disease

A

pathology of atherosclerotic PAD is identical to coronary artery disease

key risk factors:

  1. HTN
  2. hyperlipidemia
  3. smoking
  4. diabetes mellitus
  5. family hx

40% of pt with PAD have clinically significant CAD

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8
Q

physical findings: arterial insufficiency

A
  • absent or diminished pulses
  • atrophy of calf muscles
  • thickened toes/nails
  • loss of hair below knees
  • thin, shiny skin
  • non-healing wounds
  • dependent rubor
    • limb become hyperemic when you hang it over the side of the exam table → indicative of dermal arterioles’ inability to constrict in presence of incr hydrostatic pressure
    • lift leg? becomes white!
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9
Q

muscle adaptation to ischemia

what happens? what does it look like?

A
  • change in muscle structure and fx
  • denervation
  • dropout of muscle fibers

consequence: muscle wasting and loss of strength

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10
Q

ankle-brachial index

A

at baseline: can have higher measured ankle pressure than arm pressure (1:1.4 normal)

on exercise: healthy extremities show NO CHANGE in measurements

in patients with stenosis, exercise induces significant drop in pressure in stenotic limb

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11
Q

intermittent claudication tx

A
  • adjust modifiable risk factors
  • progressive exercise program
  • medications: ASA, trental, plavix, statins
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12
Q

when should you intervene?

A

when sx begin to interfere with QofL or employment

  • might manifest as rest pain (indicative of critical narrowing/thrombus)
    • limb-threatening ischemia
    • pain waking pt at night
    • pain in forefoot/foot, relieved by dangling foot over bed
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13
Q

acute limb ischemia

most common cause/where

mnemonic

A

most common cause: EMBOLI

  • often cardiac origin (80%), proximal atheroma
  • emboli lodge at artery bifurcations or in areas where vessels narrow abruptly
    • femoral artery bifurcation
    • iliac arteries
    • aorta
    • popliteal arteries

5 Ps

  1. pain
  2. pulseless
  3. paresthesias
  4. paralysis
  5. poikylothermia

EMERGENCY!!!

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