Peripheral Vascular/arterial Disease Flashcards
Definition of PAD
Narrowing of arteries supplying periphery (especially legs)
Essentially IHD of Lower limb arteries
Risk factors of PAD?
Smoking, hypertension, ageing, obesity, CKD, T2DM, male, family history
Pathology of PVD?
What are the 3 types?
Intermittent claudication (least severe)
Critical limb ischemia (most severe) - chronic
Acute limb ischemia - complication
What is intermittent claudication?
Atherosclerosis , partial lumen occlusion
Symptom of ischemia during exertion
Relieved by rest
Crampy achey pain in calf thigh or bum
What is critical limb ischemia?
Most severe
End stage PVD
Occlusion is very big, blood supply inadequate to meet metabolic demand
Pain at rest + risk of gangrene/infection + non healing ulcers
What is acute limb ischemia ?
Complication
Total occlusion of vessels, due to embolus/thrombus formation at site of critical limb ischemia lesion
Rapid onset of ischemia
What are the 6 signs of acute and chronic limb ischemia?
6Ps
Pain - burning pain -worse at nigh (when raised)
Pallor - pale
Pulseless
Paralysis
Paraesthesia - pins and needles
Perishingly cold
The more of the 6Ps you have?
The more limb threatening it is
All 6 = deadly
Extra: what syndrome is when there is occlusion in distal aorta or proximal common iliac artery ?
What’s the triad of symptoms?
Leriche syndrome
Triad = thigh/buttock claudication
Absent femoral pulse
Male impotence
When BV supplying region occluded:
What damage is done in what time?
- Irreversible nerve damage (within 6 hrs)
- Irreversible muscle damage (6-10hrs)
- Skin changes are last to appear therefore likely gangrenous
Symptoms of PVD
Skin changes on leg; cooler, ulceration, pallor, hair loss, gangrene
Muscle wasting
Bruits (sound of blood flowing through narrow portion of artery) - pulsatile regions due to turbulent flow
Buerger’s test
Fontaine classification
Some of the Ps
What happens in buergers test?
Elevate leg 45^ for 1 min = pallor
Then leg down = blue initially as ischemic tissue deoxygenates blood then reactive hyperaemia = Rubor due to vasodilation
What is Fontaine classification?
Stages 1-4
1. Asymptomatic
2. Intermittent claudication
2a = >200m pain free walking
2b=<200m
3. Chronic limb ischemia (pain at rest)
4. Ischemic ulcers - gangrene
Diagnosis of PVD
ABPI
Colour duplex ultrasound
CT angiography if surgery considered
What is ABPI?
What do the different values mean?
Ankle brachial pressure index
Ratio of systolic BP in ankle (post/ant tibial) compared to arm (brachial) - using Doppler probe/ultrasound
Normal = 0.9 - 1.3
Intermittent claudication = 0.5-0.9
Critical chronic limb ischemia = <0.5 - when absent / very low = risk of acute limb threatening ischemia
> 1.3 = calcification of the arteries (difficult to compress) found in diabetes