left leg pain brian lewis m.d. assistant professor of surgery medical college of wisconsin

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Left Leg Pain Brian Lewis M.D. Assistant Professor of Surgery Medical College of Wisconsin

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Page 1: Left Leg Pain Brian Lewis M.D. Assistant Professor of Surgery Medical College of Wisconsin

Left Leg Pain

Brian Lewis M.D.Assistant Professor of SurgeryMedical College of Wisconsin

Page 2: Left Leg Pain Brian Lewis M.D. Assistant Professor of Surgery Medical College of Wisconsin

Ms. Doe

Ms. Doe is a 55-year-old woman, c/o progressive left leg pain. She is referred by her PMD to clinic today for evaluation of left leg pain. The right leg gives her no trouble.

Page 3: Left Leg Pain Brian Lewis M.D. Assistant Professor of Surgery Medical College of Wisconsin

History

What other points of the history do you want to know?

Page 4: Left Leg Pain Brian Lewis M.D. Assistant Professor of Surgery Medical College of Wisconsin

History, Ms. Doe Consider the following:

• Characterization of Symptoms:

• Temporal sequence• Alleviating /

Exacerbating factors:

• Associated signs/symptoms • Pertinent PMH• ROS• MEDS• Relevant Family Hx.• Relevant Social Hx.

Page 5: Left Leg Pain Brian Lewis M.D. Assistant Professor of Surgery Medical College of Wisconsin

History, Ms. Doe

Characterization of symptoms• Pain occurs in left calf with walking, worsening over time.

Feels like a “cramp”. Limits her ability to play with her grandkids.

Temporal sequence• Only occurs with walking• Reproducible at the same distance

Alleviating / Exacerbating factors• Worse with walking especially up hill or stairs• Goes away when she stops

Page 6: Left Leg Pain Brian Lewis M.D. Assistant Professor of Surgery Medical College of Wisconsin

History, Ms. Doe Associated signs/symptoms:

• No pain in foot when in bed, though both feet tend to be “numb”

• No wounds on feet

Pertinent PMH:• ROS: HTN, IDDM, Hyperlipidemia, no hx of DVT/clotting disorders

• MEDS: Insulin, Amitryptiline, Atorvostatin, Lisinopril, Neurontin

Relevant Family Hx.• Positive for CAD, Diabetes

Relevant Social Hx.• Smokes cigarettes ½ ppd for 40 years

Page 7: Left Leg Pain Brian Lewis M.D. Assistant Professor of Surgery Medical College of Wisconsin

What is your Differential Diagnosis?

Page 8: Left Leg Pain Brian Lewis M.D. Assistant Professor of Surgery Medical College of Wisconsin

Differential DiagnosisBased on History and Presentation

Muscle strain Dehydration Drug reaction – statins Tendonitis Deep venous thrombosis Claudication Arthritis Varicose veins Malignancy Sciatic nerve pain

Page 9: Left Leg Pain Brian Lewis M.D. Assistant Professor of Surgery Medical College of Wisconsin

Physical Examination

What specifically would you look for?

Page 10: Left Leg Pain Brian Lewis M.D. Assistant Professor of Surgery Medical College of Wisconsin

Physical Examination, Ms. Doe Vital Signs: T 98.6° F, P 82, BP 173/81, RR 16 Appearance: Healthy, pleasant, non distressed Relevant Exam findings for a problem focused assessment

HEENT: normal, no bruits Pulses: normal radial, femoral, carotid bilaterally; absent popliteal, DP and PT pulses bilaterally

Chest: clear bilaterally Neuromuscular: neuropathy in both feet

CV: RRR, no murmurs Skin/Soft Tissue: skin shiny on bilateral legs, no wounds, legs non-tender to palpation

Abd: Soft, nontender, no masses Remaining Examination findings Remaining Examination findings non-contributorynon-contributory

Page 11: Left Leg Pain Brian Lewis M.D. Assistant Professor of Surgery Medical College of Wisconsin

Differential DiagnosisWould you like to update your differential?

Page 12: Left Leg Pain Brian Lewis M.D. Assistant Professor of Surgery Medical College of Wisconsin

Studies (Labs, X-rays etc.)

What would you obtain?

Page 13: Left Leg Pain Brian Lewis M.D. Assistant Professor of Surgery Medical College of Wisconsin

Studies, Ms. Doe

Ankle-brachial indices• Right:0.98• Left: Incompressible

Toe Pressures• Right: 60• Left: <20

Page 14: Left Leg Pain Brian Lewis M.D. Assistant Professor of Surgery Medical College of Wisconsin

ABI

Can anyone describe how ankle brachial indices are performed?

What represents normal range? Abnormal? What conditions might falsely elevate the

number?

Page 15: Left Leg Pain Brian Lewis M.D. Assistant Professor of Surgery Medical College of Wisconsin

Lab Studies ordered, Ms. Doe

CBC: Within normal limits

LFT’s Within normal limits

PT/PTT Within normal limits

Electrolytes Within normal limits

Urinalysis Within normal limits

Lipid Panel Within normal limits

Hb A1C 7.8

These were obtained by PMD 6 weeks ago

Page 16: Left Leg Pain Brian Lewis M.D. Assistant Professor of Surgery Medical College of Wisconsin

Lab Results, Discussion

Page 17: Left Leg Pain Brian Lewis M.D. Assistant Professor of Surgery Medical College of Wisconsin

Interventions at this point?

Page 18: Left Leg Pain Brian Lewis M.D. Assistant Professor of Surgery Medical College of Wisconsin

How would you manage this patient?

Risk factor control− BP control− Lower lipids/cholesterol− Blood sugar control− Smoking cessation− β-blockers− ASA

Exercise program Medications

− Pentoxifylline− Cilostazol

Page 19: Left Leg Pain Brian Lewis M.D. Assistant Professor of Surgery Medical College of Wisconsin

What next?

Page 20: Left Leg Pain Brian Lewis M.D. Assistant Professor of Surgery Medical College of Wisconsin

Next Steps

How would you schedule follow-up? Any studies at time of follow-up?

Page 21: Left Leg Pain Brian Lewis M.D. Assistant Professor of Surgery Medical College of Wisconsin

Ms. Doe calls the office 15 months later complaining of worsening symptoms in left leg.

Now pain when she walks only a few steps Now has an open wound on the left first toe

• States the wound has been present for weeks and is only getting worse

Page 22: Left Leg Pain Brian Lewis M.D. Assistant Professor of Surgery Medical College of Wisconsin

Physical Examination

PE is unchanged with exception that there is a swollen left first toe with an open 1cm x 1cm necrotic based wound on the medial aspect

The toe is extremely tender There is no drainage from the wound

Page 23: Left Leg Pain Brian Lewis M.D. Assistant Professor of Surgery Medical College of Wisconsin

What studies would you obtain?

Ankle-brachial indices• Right:0.98• Left: Incompressible

Toe Pressures• Right: 60• Left: <20

Anything else ?

Page 24: Left Leg Pain Brian Lewis M.D. Assistant Professor of Surgery Medical College of Wisconsin

Angiogram

Page 25: Left Leg Pain Brian Lewis M.D. Assistant Professor of Surgery Medical College of Wisconsin

Angiogram

Page 26: Left Leg Pain Brian Lewis M.D. Assistant Professor of Surgery Medical College of Wisconsin

Angiogram

Page 27: Left Leg Pain Brian Lewis M.D. Assistant Professor of Surgery Medical College of Wisconsin

Angiogram

Page 28: Left Leg Pain Brian Lewis M.D. Assistant Professor of Surgery Medical College of Wisconsin

Angiogram

Page 29: Left Leg Pain Brian Lewis M.D. Assistant Professor of Surgery Medical College of Wisconsin

Angiogram

Page 30: Left Leg Pain Brian Lewis M.D. Assistant Professor of Surgery Medical College of Wisconsin

Angiogram

Page 31: Left Leg Pain Brian Lewis M.D. Assistant Professor of Surgery Medical College of Wisconsin

Angiogram

How would you describe the findings?

Page 32: Left Leg Pain Brian Lewis M.D. Assistant Professor of Surgery Medical College of Wisconsin

What would you do now?

Page 33: Left Leg Pain Brian Lewis M.D. Assistant Professor of Surgery Medical College of Wisconsin

Management Options

Observe Surgery

• Options?• What workup would be required?

Endovascular management• Options?

What are some strengths and limitations of the various options?

Page 34: Left Leg Pain Brian Lewis M.D. Assistant Professor of Surgery Medical College of Wisconsin

Post op Management

Discuss routine post op

Discuss most common complications

Mention any rare findings

Page 35: Left Leg Pain Brian Lewis M.D. Assistant Professor of Surgery Medical College of Wisconsin

Discussion Additional teaching points

• Disease process− Claudication

• 1% - 2% of population <50 yo• Up to 5% of population 50 – 70 yo• Up to 10% greater then 70 yo• At 10 years only 25% have symptomatic disease

progression− Limb-threatening ischemia

• Develops in approximately 1 of every 100 claudicators• Obtaining consultants

− High incidence of CAD associated with PVD• Approximate percent with no or mild/mod CAD

40%• Approximate percent with advanced or severe CAD

60%

Page 36: Left Leg Pain Brian Lewis M.D. Assistant Professor of Surgery Medical College of Wisconsin

QUESTIONS ??????

Page 37: Left Leg Pain Brian Lewis M.D. Assistant Professor of Surgery Medical College of Wisconsin

Summary

Intervention for infra-inguinal vascular disease is most often reserved for ?• Rest pain• Tissue loss

Fix in-flow first Below the inguinal level vein is typically the preferred

conduit The role for endovascular management is evolving Vascular disease in a single territory is often a marker

for generalized vascular disease

Page 38: Left Leg Pain Brian Lewis M.D. Assistant Professor of Surgery Medical College of Wisconsin

Acknowledgment The preceding educational materials were made available through the

ASSOCIATION FOR SURGICAL EDUCATIONASSOCIATION FOR SURGICAL EDUCATION

In order to improve our educational materials wewelcome your comments/ suggestions at:

[email protected]