From the article you will learn what intermittent claudication is. For what reasons, in what diseases does the syndrome occur and how does the syndrome manifest itself? Types of treatment, prognosis in pathology.
The causes of intermittent claudication
Classification of
Symptoms of pathology
Diagnosis
Treatment methods
Prognosis
Intermittent claudication is a growing pain syndrome in the legs that occurs against the background of physical activity( walking, lifting, running) and passing after a short rest. This type of pain occurs with a long-term, or chronic, form of blood flow disturbance in arterial vessels and, as a consequence, insufficiency of blood supply to tissues.
Pathology can occur in any part of the foot or grab it entirely, but in most cases, patients are concerned about pain in the region of the shins. Their intensity is so great that there is no way to continue the movement. In the early stages of the pathology, rest brings relief, the pain subsides. With the progression of the disease, the pain syndrome is permanent, and any load makes it unbearable.
In the pathological process, the lumen of the arteries is narrowed due to a number of reasons( described in the corresponding section of the article), the blood flow in this zone is difficult, tissues do not receive enough oxygen and nutrients. At any load, the need for adequate blood supply increases, but pathologically altered arteries do not perform their function in full. There is an oxygen starvation or tissue ischemia, which manifests itself as a growing pain syndrome.
The danger of this condition is that changes in the walls of the arteries are not only in the legs - all arterial trunks, including the heart muscle and the brain, are affected. More than 20% of people with established intermittent claudication syndrome die from coronary and cerebral circulatory disorders during the first 5 years, and 10% lose their leg and become disabled.
There is no complete cure for the disease, but the onset of conservative therapy or surgical treatment will help save from amputation and prolong life.
Treatment of this pathology involves vascular or, in smaller medical institutions, general surgeons.
Causes of Intermittent Claudication
Pain in the legs when walking is a symptom of chronic arterial insufficiency, which occurs against a background of various vascular diseases. Their division by frequency of occurrence is presented in the table:
Disease
Percentage percentage
Atherosclerosis - cholesterol complex deposition in the vascular wall
81,6
Nonspecific aortoarteritis - inflammation of the arterial wall due to changes in the activity of its own immunity
9
Diabetic angiopathy - secondary pathological changes in the wallsblood vessels against a background of high blood glucose level
6
Obliterating thromboangiitis - inflammation of all layers of vessel wall with imageblood clot lumen and replacement with connective tissue
1.4
Raynaud's disease is a chronic spasm or narrowing of small capillaries of the microcirculatory bed, including vessels feeding large arterial and venous trunks
1.4
Classification of
In angiosurgery, the classification of chronic impairment of blood flow in arterial vessels named Fontaine-Pokrovsky is used:
Stage
Characteristic
First non-permanent, non-limiting intermittent claudication
The second is a limiting( violation) walking disorder
Second A - pain syndrome does not occur with ordinary walking more than 200 meters
Second B - pain in the legs disturb at a distance of less than 200 meters
Third - pain syndrome bThe initial stage characterizes the pain at night, passing with the lowering of the leg from the bed
Later the pain syndrome is permanent, the leg swollen, pale with a bluish shade
Fourth - ulcerative necrotic changes of the foot tissues
The appearance of skin ulceration
Ulcers deepen, merge betweenthemselves, forming vast areas of dead tissue
Speaking "distance without pain", evaluate walking on level ground. When lifting up or on the stairs, blood flow disturbance appears earlier.
The medical term "chronic critical lower limb ischemia" includes changes in vessels and tissues of the 3rd and 4th stages according to classification, requires constant analgesia and is accompanied by a high risk of leg amputation.
Several types of intermittent claudication are distinguished by the severity of the arterial stems:
Level
Pain localization and the affected vessel
High
Pain in the gluteal and femoral region
Disturbance of blood flow in the aorta and iliac arteries
Typical
Pain in the shins
Lesion of the popliteal-femoral arterial segment
Low
Pain in the foot
Narrowing of the arteries of the lower leg
Symptoms of the pathology
DevelopedThe chronic disturbance of blood flow in arterial vessels of the legs includes a number of symptoms, of which the main is intermittent claudication.
Its features
Pain syndrome
In the first stages of the disturbance of the blood supply occurs only with exercise, later - there is also at rest
Pain sudden, passes only after rest( if there is no critical disturbance of blood flow with the development of tissue necrosis)
Paresthesia
Feeling numblegs or parts of it
Local skin temperature decrease
Changes in skin and its appendages
Increased skin moisture( hyperhidrosis) - with thrombangiite
Very dry skin withabundant areas of peeling, cracking and fragility of nails - with atherosclerotic lesions of vessels
Osteoporosis
Breaking of bone tissue on the background of increased calcium excretion function
Alopecia
Areas of complete hair loss on the skin of the foot
Atrophy of tissues
The destruction of muscle and fat cells due to impaired blood supplytissues( symptoms of "empty heel" or "empty finger" - with local pressure for a long time, the impression is retained)
Lethalization of tissues or gangrene
There are 3-4 stages of blood flow disturbance in the arterial vessel
Dead or necrotic tissues can not be restored, they require surgical removal
The quality of life of the patient with intermittent claudication depends on the leveland arterial vasoconstriction:
the initial stages of the disease remain unnoticed, since moderate pain in the legs is not so pronounced and does not require rest during the load;
pain syndrome, starting from the second stage of the process, is already quite intense, makes changing habits and volume of a one-off load, making life and work less comfortable;
extreme degrees of blood flow disturbance is accompanied by constant pain, which does not allow you to perform even household tasks, patients require outside help.
Diagnosis
Method
What does
evaluate?( Complaint, anamnesis)
The presence of characteristic complaints.
Duration of the disease.
Features of pain, to exclude another cause of pathology.
Inspection
Evaluation of the pulse on the central and peripheral arteries: its strength, filling, presence.
Assessment of signs of changes in tissue nutrition( trophic): ulceration, hair loss, brittle and nodular stratification, swelling, blueness of the skin.
Functional tests
Opel test - raise legs from a lying position by 40 cm, fix for 2 minutes, on the side of the lesion marked pallor and blue skin.
Burdenko's test - quickly bend the leg in the knee 10 times, with a violation of blood flow, note the marbling of the skin.
Pilchakova's test - to throw a leg on a leg in a sitting position for 5-10 minutes, with insufficient blood supply there are pains, changes in the color of the skin.
Ultrasonography( ultrasound dopplerography)
Evaluation of blood flow velocity in blood vessels.
Localization of the exact location and extent of the artery narrowing zone.
Determination of the cause of blood flow disturbance.
Evaluation of the presence of a bypass blood supply zone of interest.
Selection of part of the vessel that can be stored during surgery.
Treadmill test
Evaluation of the rate of recovery of normal blood flow in the legs after walking for 200 meters, distinguish: limited reserve( recovery less than 15 minutes) and critical reserve( more than 15 minutes).
Used to determine the indications for surgical treatment.
Percutaneous Oximetry
Determination of the amount of oxygen in the arterial blood and in the capillaries of the skin( shows the level of tissue saturation, their ability to self-repair in conditions of trophic disorders).
The norm is 50-60 mm.gt;The border figures are 30-40.
Flowmetry( laser dopplerography)
Evaluation of the quality of capillary blood flow.
Angiography
Study of arteries by introducing a special contrast visible in X-rays.
Accurate definition of the affected area.
Evaluation of the vascular wall throughout.
Solving the issue of the need and possibilities of surgical treatment.
Methods of treatment
Intermittent lame is a condition that is treated all life. There is no complete recovery, but with constant therapy, the risk of death is reduced, the quality of life and the ability to carry out loads are improved.
General principles of treatment for stages
Stage of disease
Treatment type
First
Conservative
Second A
Conservative treatment or operation
Second B, Third
Recovery operation
Fourth
Recovery operation + removal of necrotic tissue( necrectomy) and / or amputation of legat different levels
Conservative treatment
Indicated for patients with any stage of the process, conducted continuously, without interruptions, until the end of life.
Principle
Specific actions and / or preparations
Eliminate risk factors
Quit smoking
Normalize pressure and weight
Compensate sugar level
Drink disaggregants - make blood less viscous
Aspirin
Plavix
Tiklid
Take statins - improve fat metabolism
Lipobolide
Lovastatin
Lipostabil
Recover metabolic processes
Trental
Vitamins
Actovegin
Improve tissue oxygenation
Tocopherol
Drink prostaglNdine - suppress inflammation in the vascular wall
Alprostan
Vazaprostan
Enhance immunity
Polioksidoniy
T-activin
Viferon
Drug-free treatment
Massage
Physiotherapy
Spa treatment
LFK
Hydrogen sulfide baths
Surgery
Lies in reconstructive operations aimedon the restoration of normal blood flow in a zone with a pathological process.
Type of operation
What type of operation is performed
How to do
How to do
Endarterectomy
Excision of the inner shell of the artery in the area of its lesion
Resection with prosthetics
Removal of damaged segment of the vessel with its own vein replacement or artificial graft
Installing a medical mesh or stanthat for the artificial extension of the vessel and creating a wall strength( low-invasive surgery)
Prognosis
Intermittent claudication is the main syndrome of chronic arterial system damage, and it is impossible to completely recover from pathology. The established diagnosis is an indication for permanent, lifelong, conservative therapy, even if a reconstructive operation is performed on the vessels.
Pathological changes in the arterial vessels are twice as frequent in the male contingent.
After the diagnosis is established, during the first 5 years 20-30% of patients die, and for 10 years - 40-70%.More than 65% of them die from acute forms of blood flow disorders in the cardiac vessels or the arteries of the brain, since any pathological changes in the vessel wall can not be local in nature and affect only the legs.
For the preservation of the legs, the prognosis is more favorable: with constant treatment, in 70-75% of the vessels changes stabilize, and in 40-45% even the pain syndrome decreases. Only in 10-20% of patients signs of blood flow disorders increase and lead to amputation.