FALSELY ELEVATED ANKLE PRESSURES IN SEVERE LEG ISCHEMIA - THE POLE TEST - AN ALTERNATIVE APPROACH

被引:33
作者
SMITH, FCT
SHEARMAN, CP
SIMMS, MH
GWYNN, BR
机构
[1] Stafford District General Hospital, Selly Oak Hospital, Birmingham
来源
EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF VASCULAR SURGERY | 1994年 / 8卷 / 04期
关键词
CRITICAL LEG ISCHEMIA; ANKLE SYSTOLIC PRESSURE; POLE TEST; ELEVATION; DOPPLER ULTRASOUND;
D O I
10.1016/S0950-821X(05)80958-2
中图分类号
R5 [内科学];
学科分类号
1002 ; 100201 ;
摘要
Ankle-brachial pressure indices (ABPPs), measured by sphygmomanometer and Doppler probe, are an accepted index of chronic leg ischaemia. However, tibial artery sclerosis or calcification decreases compliance, producing falsely elevated cuff occlusion pressures. Arterial cannulation is invasive and impractical, but by elevating the foot and measuring the height at which the Doppler signal disappears, ankle systolic pressure in mmHg can be derived. Using an 8MHz Doppler apparatus and calibrated pole, ankle systolic pressures measured by sphygmomanometer and elevation were compared in 49 severely ischaemic legs (40 patients). ABPPs were derived by dividing ankle systolic pressure by brachial pressure. Median (interquartile range) ABPI assessed by sphygmomanometry was 0.46 (0.35-0.56). Median ABPI measured by leg elevation was significantly lower at 0.21 (0.14-0.30), p < 0.0001, Wilcoxon. In 20 patients undergoing in situ vein bypass grafting, direct transducer-derived pressure measurements were obtained. Median ABPI for this method was 0.15 (0.11-0.27). No significant difference was found when compared with ABPIs derived by elevation, median 0.2 (0.13-0.31), p = 0.324, however median ABPI measured by sphygmomanometry was significantly higher at 0.37 (0.27-0.6), p = 0.0008. Correlation of elevation with transducer-assessed pressure measurements (r = 0.88) was closer than with cuff-derived measurements (r = 0.69). Pressures derived by leg elevation provide a more accurate index of severe leg ischaemia than sphygmomanometry, although the technique is limited to assessing pressures of less than approximately 60 mmHg. Falsely elevated ABPIs may underestimate the extent of disease in patients assessed for vascular reconstruction. © 1994 W. B. Saunders Company Ltd.
引用
收藏
页码:408 / 412
页数:5
相关论文
共 14 条
[1]  
Shearman, Gwynn, Curran, Gannon, Simms, Non-invasive femoropopliteal assessment—is that angiogram really necessary?, BMJ, 293, pp. 1086-1089, (1986)
[2]  
Yao, Hobbs, Irvine, Ankle systolic pressure measurements in arterial disease affecting the lower extremities, Br J Surg, 56, pp. 676-679, (1969)
[3]  
Raines, Darling, Buth, Brewster, Austen, Vascular laboratory criteria for the management of peripheral vascular disease of the lower extremities, Surgery, 79, pp. 21-29, (1976)
[4]  
Second European Consensus Document on Chronic Critical Limb Ischaemia, Eur J Vasc Surg, 69, pp. 1-32, (1992)
[5]  
Yao, Hobbs, Irvine, Ankle pressure measurement in arterial disease of the lower extremities, Br J Surg, 55, pp. 859-860, (1968)
[6]  
Wyss, Matsen, Simmons, Burgess, Transculaneous oxygen tension measurements on limbs of diabetic and non-diabetic patients with peripheral vascular disease, Surgery, 95, pp. 339-345, (1984)
[7]  
Fronek, Coel, Bernstein, The importance of combined multisegmental pressure and Doppler flow velocity studies in the diagnosis of peripheral arterial occlusive disease, Surgery, 84, pp. 840-847, (1978)
[8]  
Taguchi, Suwangool, Pipe stem brachial arteries: A cause of pseudohypertension, JAMA, 228, (1974)
[9]  
Farris, Duncan, The assessment of critical skin ischaemia, Vascular Surgery, Issues in Current Practice, (1986)
[10]  
Rutherford, Vascular Surgery, (1977)