Vascular Surgery Flashcards
how can peripheral arterial disease (PAD) present?
- intermittent claudication
- critical limb ischaemia
- acute limb ischaemia
describe intermittent claudication. which areas are typically affected by this?
- limb pain which comes on with exertion and goes away at rest
- can cause fatigue on speedwalking
- calves
- thighs
- buttocks
describe the nature of the pain felt in intermittent claudication
- crampy
- achey
describe critical limb ischaemia (CLI)
- the end stage of PAD
- pain in limb at rest
features of CLI?
- pain
- pallor
- pulseless
- paralysis
- paraesthesia
- perishingly cold
- non-healing ulcers
- gangrene
describe the pain felt in CLI
- burning sensation
- present at rest
- worse at night (leg is raised)
triad of leriche syndrome?
- thigh/buttock claudication
- absent femoral pulses
- male impotence
what causes leriche syndrome?
occlusion of distal aorta / common iliac artery
describe buerger’s test
- with pt laying on their back, lift their leg to 45 degs
- hold there for 1-2 mins
- look for pallor
- then sit the pt up and hang their legs over side of bed
- look for colour changes
what is buerger’s angle?
the angle at which the leg becomes pale
in a healthy pt, what happens at the end of buerger’s test?
legs remain pink
in a pt with PAD, what happens at the end of buerger’s test?
- initially legs turn blue
- then go dark red (rubor)
describe an arterial ulcer
- small, deep “punched out” lesion
- well-defined borders
- typically on toes
- no bleeding
- painful
describe a venous ulcer
- large
- superficial
- irregular borders
- typically on gaiter region
- less painful
where is the gaiter region?
mid-calf down to ankle
investigations for PAD?
- ABPI
- duplex USS
- angiography (CT or MRI)
what is the normal range for ABPI?
0.9 - 1.3
what would an ABPI of < 0.3 indicate?
CLI
what could an ABPI of > 1.3 indicate? who is this more common in?
- arterial calcification
- diabetics
management of intermittent claudication?
- stop smoking
- optimise comorbidities (HTN, DM)
- exercise training
- drugs
- surgery
drugs offered in intermittent claudication?
- atorvastatin 80mg
- clopidogrel 75mg OD (alt: aspirin)
- naftidrofuryl oxalate
surgical options for intermittent claudication?
- endovascular angioplasty and stenting
- endarterectomy
- bypass surgery
- amputation
management of acute limb ischaemia?
vascular emergency:
- endovascular thrombolysis
- thrombectomy
- endarterectomy
- bypass surgery
- amputation
how could a venous thrombus cause a stroke?
- breaks off to form an embolus
- in someone with an ASD, travels across the heart into systemic circulation
- travels up to brain