Internal Medicine

(Wang) #1

P1: SBT


0521779407-04a CUNY1086/Karliner 0 521 77940 7 June 4, 2007 20:48


Atherosclerotic Occlusive Disease 183

■Musculoskeletal causes of limb pain (require longer rest to resolve,
rarely originate in calf )
■Diabetic neuropathy (shooting pain or cramps that radiate up and
down the leg, occur at night, rarely localized just to foot)
■Venous ulcers (located at malleolus, painless, other stigmata and
history of venous disease)

management
What to Do First
■Determine if urgent revascularization is needed:
■Symptomatic carotid stenosis –
➣recent TIA
➣resolving stroke with high grade lesion
■Acute mesenteric infarction –
➣severe abdominal pain (out of proportion to tenderness) peri-
toneal signs
acidosis
leukocytosis
■Renal artery
➣Severe bilateral disease with volume overload/pulmonary edema
■Critical limb ischemia – as defined above as Limb Threat

General Measures
■Smoking cessation
■Risk factor control: aggressive management of hyperlipidemia,
hypertension
■Evaluation for hypercoagulable state – most require lifelong antico-
agulation

specific therapy
Carotid Stenosis
■Symptomatic Patients
➣Carotid endarterectomy: all patients with stenosis > 70%, and
any good-risk patient with stenosis > 50%
➣Perioperative combined stroke+death rate must be less than
7% to achieve benefit
■Asymptomatic Patients
➣Perioperative combined stroke+death rate must be less than
5% to achieve benefit
➣Carotid endarterectomy: for any patient with > 80% stenosis and
expected survival greater than 2 years
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