Acute limb ischaemia Flashcards
What is acute limb ischaemia
Sudden decrease in limb perfusion tht thratens the viability of the limb
1.5 per 10,000 person yers
What are the causes
Thrombosis in situ (60%) - atheroma in artery ruptures and thrombus forms (platelets aggregate due rupture plaque)
Embolisation (30%) - thrombus from a proximal source which travels distally and becomes lodged –> occludes
Trauma (10%) - including compartment syndrome
What are the clinical features
6Ps Pain Pallor Pulselessness Paraesthesia Pershingly Cold Paralysis *sudden onset
What is a sensitive sign of embolic occlusion
Contralateral limb is pulsatile
What are the causes of embolisation
Chronic limb ischaemia AF Recent MI Symptomatic AAA - back/abdo pain Peripheral aneurysms
What are the stages of acute limb ischaemia
I - Viable
No immediate threat, no sensory loss, no motor loss, arterial doppler audible, venous doppler audible
IIA- Marginally threatened
Salvageable if promptly treated, minimal sensory loss, no motor deficit, Arterial doppler unaudible, venous doppler audible
IIB - Immediately threatened.
Sensory loss more than toes, Rest pain, Mild/moderate motor deficit, Arterial doopler inaudible, venous doppler audible
III - Irreversible
Major tissue loss, permanent nerve loss, Profound sensory loss, profound motor paralysis, Arterial and venous dopplers inuaudible
What are the differentials for an acutely cold leg
critical chronic limb ischaemia - would have had intermittent claudication prior to presentation. pain before this presentation
Acute DVT - warm, red swollen leg NOT COLD
Spinal cord/peripheral nerve compression - legswould be well perfused and pulses present
Which investigations would be done
Bedside - BP, ECG, Pulse, sats
Bloods - FBC, U+Es, CRP, LFTs, Lipids, glucose, serum lactate (assess level of ischaemia)
Thrombophilia screen if under 50 and unknown cause
G+S
Imaging - Doppler USS
CT angiography (gold standard) - if salvageable limb can get more info about location and help decide surgical approach
How is acute limb ichaemia managed
Initial - A -E assessment
- high flow O2
- 2 wide bore cannulas
- thearpeutic dose of heparin or heparin infusion
Conservative
prolonged course of heparin - needs reg assessment. If no improvement - surgery
Surgical intervention IF embolic - embolectomy via a forgarty catheter - local intra-arterial thrombolysis - bypass surgery if insufficient flow back
IF due to thrombotic disease
- local intra-arterial thrombolysis
- angioplasty
- Bypass surgery
When is urgent amputation considered
If leg has irreversible ischaemia
- mottled non-blanching appearnace
- hard woody muscles
How is the patient managed after an urgent amputation
Surgical HDU
OT and physio with rehab programme
What is the long term management for patients with acute limb ischaemia
Decrease CVS risk - regular exercise, smoking cessation and diet
Antiplatelet agent - aspirin, clopidogrel
Treat any underlying conditions predisposing to acute limb iachaemia
What are the complications
Mortality rate is 20%
Reperfusion injury - sudden increase in capillary permeability
Can go on to cause compartment syndrome
Release of substances from damaged muscle cells into blood
- K+ - hyperkalaemia
- H+ - acidosis
- Rhabdomyolysis - AKI