Acute arterial ischemia: Difference between revisions

Line 64: Line 64:
#*Management of embolism:
#*Management of embolism:
#**Embolectomy (limb salvage decreases after 4-6 hours)
#**Embolectomy (limb salvage decreases after 4-6 hours)
#*Management of thrombus:
#**Non-limb threatening: intra-arterial thrombolytic
#**Severe limb-threatening ischemia: thrombectomy plus bypass grafting


==Disposition==
==Disposition==

Revision as of 18:05, 31 January 2017

Background

  • Sudden decrease in perfusion that may result in irreversible limb loss.

Etiology

  • Thrombotic vs Embolic
    • Thrombosis occurs in vessels with existing atherosclerosis that have already formed existing collaterals.
    • Embolism occurs in vessels usually free of atherosclerosis, therefore without existing collaterals. This results in higher level of limb ischemia.

Clinical Features

6 Ps

  • Pain - Claudication or pain with leg elevation; typically earliest sign
  • Paraesthesia - May be associated with weakness; preservation of light touch is good guide to viability
  • Pallor
  • Paralysis
  • Pulselessness - May be accompanied by skin changes; late finding
  • Poikilothermia - Limb is cool to touch when compared to other side; late finding

Differential Diagnosis

Foot diagnoses

Acute

Subacute/Chronic

Evaluation

ABI

  • Measuring
    1. Position patient supine
    2. Measure SBP from both brachial arteries using cuff and handheld Doppler over the AC fossa
    3. Measure SBP from both DP and PT arteries using cuff placed just proximal to the malleoli with Doppler over artery (5-8% of normal patients have absent DP pulse)
    4. Calculate ABI on each leg by taking the highest ankle SBP divided by the highest brachial SBP and record to 2 decimal places
  • Using calculation
    • 0.91–1.30: normal
    • 0.70–0.90: mild occlusion
    • 0.40–0.69: moderate occlusion
    • <0.40: severe occlusion
    • >1.30: poorly compressible/calcified vessels

Imaging

  • Angiogram considered gold standard
  • CTA
  • US

Thrombosis vs Embolus

Key features Thrombosis Embolus
Source Usually unknown Heart (A-fib most common)
History PAD, claudication Less likely to have PAD and claudication
Physical exam Absent pulse. Consistent with PAD: hair loss, thickened nails etc Absent pulse. Usually no evidence of PAD
Degree of arthersclerosis Diffuse Minimal
Collaterals Well-developed Few

Management

  1. Unfractionated heparin
    • 80 units/kg bolus; then infuse 18units/kg/hr
  2. ASA
  3. Dependent positioning
  4. Pain control
  5. Fluid resuscitation and treatment of heart failure as needed to improve limb perfusion
  6. Vascular surgery consultation (clot retrieval, balloon angioplasty, intraarterial tPA, stenting, bypass)
    • Management of embolism:
      • Embolectomy (limb salvage decreases after 4-6 hours)
    • Management of thrombus:
      • Non-limb threatening: intra-arterial thrombolytic
      • Severe limb-threatening ischemia: thrombectomy plus bypass grafting

Disposition

  • Acute limb ischemia requires inpatient management

See Also

External Links

References