What is peripheral arterial disease usually due to?
PAD = disease process resulting from stenosis of large peripheral arteries, exclusive of coronary and intracranial cerebrovascular system, most commonly due to atherosclerosis
(note: random vasospams can also occur)
4 main risk factors for PAD
Clinical presentation of PAD –> Fontaine classification
Site of pain in vascular disease –> artery affected:
- Buttock and hip –>
- Thigh –>
- Upper 2/3 of calf –>
- Lower 1/3 of calf –>
- Foot claudication –>
Leriche syndrome triad
exacerbating + relieving factors
Intermittent claudication is the most common symptom of PAD –> what is it
appearance of each –> borders?
dry gangrene vs wet gangrene –> which is more serious?
Buerger’s test
Buerger’s Test - used to assess the adequacy of arterial supply to the leg
Vascular investigations if you suspect patient has PAD
Management of asymptomatic PAD or mild claudication
include surgical options
Management of short-distance claudication PAD
When would surgical bypass be used in PAD
Surgical bypass is used when lesions are diffuse (not focal) and angioplasty is not appropriate
Complications of surgery in PAD
ABPI ?
Symptoms of critical limb ischaemia
Management of critical limb ischaemia
Amputation complications
Amputation rehab
6 Ps of acute limb ischaemia
Aetiology of acute limb ischaemia
due to a thrombus (clot) or emboli blocking the arterial supply of a distal limb –> 90% are due to emboli
Rutherford classification of acute limb ischaemia
Once a diagnosis of acute arterial occlusion has been made –> what should the next steps in management be?
details of how thrombolysis works
What is thrombolysis and why is it not suitable for limb-threatening ischaemia
What is a limb-threatening condition that can occur after reperfusion of the ischaemic tissue?
Compartment syndrome;
- Post-op –> limb is perfused but, patient reports severe pain in the calf and inability to dorsiflex the foot
- Reperfusion of ischaemic muscle results in muscle oedema –> swelling due to failure of cellular membrane function and capillary leakage
- As muscles are enclosed in bony fascial compartments, an increase in volume leads to increased compartmental pressure - causes pressure on nerves, veins, arteries within compartments
- As compartment pressure rises, tissue perfusion decreases
- As muscle perfusion decreases you get further ischaemic injury, increasing muscle oedema
- This causes obstruction of veins, arteries, and capillaries, nerve dysfunction, and muscle infarction
NOTE: The anterior compartment is the most vulnerable
Types of aneurysms