The Cramping Leg Management of peripheral vascular disease Dr Patricia Yih Department of Surgery,...

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Epidemiology

General prevalance 3-10% (ABI < 0.9)

>70 years old: 15-20%

Asymptomatic 75%

Symptomatic:

Intermittent claudication

Critical limb ishcemia

Clinical Course

Hirsch AT et al. J Am Coll Cardiol

Asymptomatic PVD Vascular disease progression related to baseline ABI

Identical to symptomatic patients

Coexisting vascular disease (atherosclerotic)

Coronary artery disease

CVA

Risk: MI/CVA 5-7%/year, mortality 2%/year

Also related to baseline ABI

Management:

Intensive risk factor modifiation

Antithrombotic therapy

Mehler PS et al. Circulation 2003

Intermittent Claudication Only about 25% deteriorate ever

Disease progression related to:

ABI (<0.50 >2x more likely need intervention/amputation)

Low ankle pressure (40-60mmHg 8.5% limb loss/year)

At 5 years:Stable (70-80%)

Worsening(10-20%)

Criticalischemia(5-10%)

Hirsch AT et al. J Am Coll Cardiol 2006; 47: 1239-1312

Risk Factor Modification Stop smoking

Control of BP

Control of DM

Control of hyperlipidemia

Weight reduction

Exercise Rehabilitation Supervised

Program:

Treadmill or track walking to bring on claudication

Followed by rest until pain subsided

Then resume

30-60 minute sessions

3 times/week, for 3 months (TASC II guidelines, Recommendation 14)

Selective exercise of most ischemic muscles

Doubles claudication distance in 80% of patients

Stewart K et al. N Engl J Med 2002

Drugs Antiplatelet agents

Aspirin

Clopidogrel

Cilostazol (PletaalTM)

Vasodilator, metabolic and antiplatelet activity

Increased walking distance 50-70m

Best evidence

Naftidrofuryl (PraxileneTM)

Improve muscle metabolism, reduce RBC/platelet aggregation

Increased walking distance by 26%

Pentoxifylline

Similar to placebo

Regensteiner J et al. J Am Geriatr Soc 2002

Lehert P et al. J Cardiovasc Pharmacol 1994

Indications for Intervention Severe, lifestyle-limiting

claudication

Failed drug therapy and exercise

Prerequisite:

Inflow satisfactory

Distal runoff patent

SFA Disease

“Stupid Femoral Artery”

High failure rate after intervention

Factors affecting result of intervention Multiple lesions

Long segment stenosis

Complete occlusion

Below knee

Choice of intervention

Surgical bypass

Vein graft

Prosthetic graft

Endovascular

Angioplasty

Primary stenting

Arthrectomy

Outcome Measures Usually considered together with critical ischemia

Patency rate

ABI

Limb salvage

Mortality

Surgical Bypass vs Angioplasty

TASC classification

Angioplasty

Bypass

If high risk for surgery

Surgical Bypass – ConduitSurgical Bypass – Conduit Autogenous vs prosthetic materials:

De Vries S et al, J Vasc Surg 1997

In-situ vs reversed vein graft:

No difference

Mamode N et al, Cochrane Database Syst Rev. 2000

Angioplasty vs StentingAngioplasty vs Stenting

Meta-analysis: no difference

1-Year Patency Rate Postoperative ABI

Mwipatayi et al, Journal of Vascular Surgery, Feb 2008

ConclusionConclusion Clinical course/deterioration, systemic disease related to

baseline ABI

When to intervene?

Lifestyle limiting claudication, failure of conservative management

Radiological confirmation of adequate inflow and runoff required

Bypass or angioplasty?

Depends on disease location, extent

Angioplasty: to stent or not?

No difference

Depends on expertise available, patient condition