Show Your Best
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Transcript of Show Your Best
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Kolapo DaSilva
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CC Pain when walking
HPI Mr S. – 50 y.o. male smoker presenting 10/8/08 to
vascular clinic for bilateral LE claudication Pain on ambulation x 1-2 blocks, beginning in
buttocks, extending to thighs and calves Progressively worsening for past 4 years Worse when walking uphill/stairs Denies nonhealing foot ulcers Also complains of erectile dysfunction
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PHM, FH Non contributory
PSH Ureteral strictures s/p ?recurrent UTIs
Soc Hx ½ PPD x 10 years Denies alcohol use
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PE Pleasant gentleman in NAD Wt 59.5 kg, T 36.4 Neck: Negative carotid bruits. Chest: Clear to auscultation bilaterally. Cardiovascular: RRR s gallops, rubs, or murmurs. Abdomen: soft and mildly protuberant, bowel sounds
present. No pulsatile masses. No organomegaly. Extremities: 2+ equal radial pulses. Nonpalpable
femoral pulses bilaterally. Nonpalpable politeal and distal pulses bilaterally. No ischemic or venostasis changes. ABI – 0.5 on right, 0.6 on left
Labs/studies ABI (7/25/08): 0.5 on right, 0.6 on left Aorto-Iliac Duplex (11/10/08): distal aorta occlusion distal
to origin of renal arteries. Occlusion of the bilateral common iliac arteries.
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Labs/studies (continued) CTA of the abdomen
and pelvis and bilateral lower extremities Crescentic thrombus
within the descending aorta, extending to below the renal arteries, where there is total occlusion
Common iliac arteries are chronically occluded and small
Enlarged inferior epigastric arteries bilaterally which fill the common femoral arteries and external iliac arteries in a retrograde fashion into the internal iliac arteries.
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Leriche Syndrome Triad of buttock/leg claudication,
absent/diminished femoral pulses, and erectile dysfunction
Caused by occlusion of distal abdominal aorta at bifurcation into common iliac arteries by atheroma
Usually affects younger males (30-40s) Associated with cigarette smoking,
hypercholesterolemia, not necessarily diabetes (smaller vessel disease)
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Leriche Syndrome Triad of buttock/leg claudication,
absent/diminished femoral pulses, and erectile dysfunction
Caused by occlusion of distal abdominal aorta at bifurcation into common iliac arteries by atheroma
Usually affects younger males (30-40s) Associated with cigarette smoking,
hypercholesterolemia (pt cholesterol 274 on 6/5/06 (nl 125-200), not necessarily diabetes (smaller vessel disease)
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AORTOILIAC BYPASS GRAFT
AXILLOFEMORAL AND FEMORAL-FEMORAL BYPASS (AX-FEM FEM-
FEM)
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Wikipedia LearningRadiology.com UpToDate Images obtained via Google Images, IDX
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