Chapter 9 Lower Extremity Peripheral Artery Disease
Confirmed PAD diagnosisLifestyle-limiting symptoms
Three-month trial
Three-month trial
No significant
functional disability
- No claudication treatment required.• Follow-up visits at least annually to monitor for development of leg, coronary, or cerebrovascular ischemic symptoms.
Further anatomic definition
by more extensive
noninvasive or
angiographic diagnostic
techniques
Lifestyle-limiting symptoms with
evidence of inflow disease*
Endovascular
therapy or surgical bypass per anatomy
Clinical improvement:
Preprogram and Follow-up visitsat least annually
postprogram exercise
testing for efficacy
Significant disability
despite medical therapy and/or
inflow endovascular therapy, with documentation of outflow† PAD, with favorable procedural anatomy
and procedural risk-benefit ratio
Evaluation for additional endovascular or
surgical revascularization
Pharmacological
therapy:Cilostazol
(Pentoxifylline)
Supervised
exercise program
Fig. 9.5
Treatment of claudication.
* Infl ow disease should be suspected in individuals with gluteal or thigh claudication and femoral pulse diminution or bruit and
should be confi rmed by noninvasive vascular laboratory diagnostic evidence of aortoiliac stenosis.
† Outfl ow disease represents femoropopliteal and infrapopliteal stenoses (the presence of occlusive lesions in the lower extremi
ty arterial tree below the inguinal ligament from the common femoral artery to the pedal vessels).