1. ACUTE LIMB ISCHAEMIA
- Sudden interruption or cessation of blood flow in a major artery supplying the limb
- The blood supply becomes inadequate to meet basal metabolic requirements
Etiology
- Embolisation – emboli from a thrombus travels distally to occlude the artery. Can be due to
- Atrial fibrillation
- Mural thrombus after recent myocardial infarction
- Abdominal aortic aneurysm (AAA)
- Prosthetic heart valves
- Thrombus in situ – from thrombus formation on atherosclerotic plaque, frequently occurs in the setting of peripheral artery disease (PAD)
- Trauma, compartment syndrome
Classification
Fontaine Classification – solely based on symptoms
- Stage 1 – no clinical symptoms
- Stage 2 – intermittent claudication
- 2a – well compensated; able to walk >200 meters
- 2b – poorly compensated; only able to walk <200 meters
- Stage 3 – pain at rest
- Stage 4 – gangrene, ischaemic ulcer
Rutherford Classification – based on symptoms and diagnostic results
- Stage I (viable) – no pain, no neurological deficit, Doppler shows audible signal, venous flow present
- Stage IIa (marginally threatened) – no pain, numbness, no audible Doppler signal, venous flow present
- Stage IIb (immediately threatened) – persistent pain, sensory and motor loss, no Doppler signal, venous flow present
- Stage III (irreversible) – paralysis and anaesthesia, no venous flow
Clinical features
- Six Ps
- Pain
- Pallor
- Pulselessness
- Paraesthesia
- Perishingly cold
- Paralysis
- Irreversible neuromuscular damage is more likely >6 hours after symptom onset
- Differentiating between thrombus vs embolus
- Embolus – contralateral pulse is palpable; sudden onset of symptoms
- Thrombus – contralateral pulse is not palpable; less sudden onset
Investigations
- Bloods – FBC, PT/APTT, ABGs, LDH
- Doppler US
- Ankle-brachial pressure index (ABPI) –
- ABPI = Pleg / Parm
- 1 is normal (>1.2 could mean abnormal vessel hardening i.e. calcification)
- <0.9 means ischaemia is present
- <0.3 means severe ischaemia with gangrene
- Pleg – systolic BP in leg (dorsalis pedis artery/posterior tibial artery)
- Parm – systolic BP in arm (brachial artery)
- ABPI = Pleg / Parm
- CT angiography
Treatment
- Considered a surgical emergency – irreversible tissue damage occurs within 6 hours
Initial management
- Correct fluid and electrolyte imbalance
- High-flow oxygen and heparin bolus IVV
- Analgesia – opioids and COX2 inhibitors
Embolic etiology
- Balloon catheter embolectomy
- Endovascular procedures
- Arterial bypass/reconstruction
- Amputation
Thrombotic etiology
- Thrombolytics – streptokinase, urokinase, rTPA
- Arterial bypass/reconstruction
- Endovascular – angioplasty, stents
- Catheter thrombectomy
- Amputation
2. CHRONIC LIMB ISCHAEMIA
- Peripheral arterial disease that results in symptomatic reduced blood supply to the limbs
Etiology
- Atherosclerosis – most common in the lower limbs
- Risk factors – smoking, diabetes mellitus, hypertension, hyperlipidemia, family history, obesity
Clinical features
- Progression of symptoms – asymptomatic → intermittent claudication → ischaemic rest pain → ulceration and gangrene
- Rest pain is exacerbated when limb is elevated and relieved by sitting or standing
Critical limb ischaemia
- Advanced form of chronic limb ischaemia
- Defined as
- Ischaemic rest pain for >2 weeks, requiring opiate analgesia
- Presence of ischaemic lesions or gangrene
- ABPI <0.5
Investigations
- Buerger’s test – patient lies supine and raises legs until they go pale; then lowers them until the colour returns
- Buerger’s angle – the angle at which the limb goes pale – angle <20o indicates severe ischaemia
- ABPI – see above
- Dopple US
- CT angiography
Treatment
- Management of cardiovascular risk – lifestyle modifications, statins, anti-platelets (clopidogrel)
- Surgery
- Angioplasty
- Bypass grafting
- Amputations