Managing Peripheral Vascular Disease | Skills Pool
스킬 파일
Managing Peripheral Vascular Disease
Guides PVD assessment with ABI interpretation and intervention referral criteria. Use when evaluating peripheral vascular disease, interpreting ABI studies, or managing claudication.
Guides PVD assessment with ABI interpretation and intervention referral criteria.
Why This Skill Exists
Peripheral artery disease (PAD) affects approximately 8.5 million Americans and is a marker of systemic atherosclerosis associated with a 3–6x increased risk of cardiovascular death. The 2024 ACC/AHA Guideline on Peripheral Artery Disease provides evidence-based recommendations for diagnosis, risk stratification, medical management, and revascularization. PAD is significantly underdiagnosed — up to 50% of patients are asymptomatic, and the ankle-brachial index (ABI), the primary screening tool, is underutilized in primary care.
Progression from claudication to critical limb-threatening ischemia (CLTI) carries a 25% risk of major amputation at one year. Timely diagnosis, aggressive risk factor modification, supervised exercise therapy, and appropriate revascularization referral can prevent limb loss and reduce cardiovascular events.
Checkpoint A: Pre-Draft Intake (Mandatory)
What are the presenting symptoms — claudication (distance, location), rest pain, non-healing wounds, or asymptomatic? (default: "Symptoms not documented")
What is the ankle-brachial index (ABI)? (default: "ABI not performed")
관련 스킬
Are pulse examinations documented (femoral, popliteal, DP, PT)? (default: "Pulses not documented")
What is the Rutherford or Fontaine classification? (default: "Not classified")
What are the cardiovascular risk factors — smoking, diabetes, hypertension, hyperlipidemia? (default: "Risk factors not assessed")
Is the patient currently on antiplatelet and statin therapy? (default: "Medication status unknown")
Has non-invasive vascular testing been performed beyond ABI (segmental pressures, duplex, CTA, MRA)? (default: "No additional imaging")
Are there signs of critical limb-threatening ischemia — rest pain, tissue loss, gangrene? (default: "CLTI not assessed")
Documents to Request
ABI measurement report (resting and post-exercise if available)
Segmental pressure and pulse volume recording (PVR) study
Duplex ultrasound of lower extremity arteries
CTA or MRA of aorto-iliac and lower extremity vasculature (if intervention planned)
Wound assessment documentation (if tissue loss present)
Current medication list
Lipid panel, HbA1c, renal function
Smoking history and cessation status
Prior vascular interventions or surgical reports
Step 1: Diagnosis and Severity Classification
ABI Interpretation:
ABI Value
Interpretation
> 1.40
Non-compressible (calcified vessels — common in diabetes, CKD); use TBI
1.00–1.40
Normal
0.91–0.99
Borderline; consider exercise ABI
0.41–0.90
Mild-to-moderate PAD
≤ 0.40
Severe PAD; high risk for CLTI
Toe-Brachial Index (TBI): Use when ABI > 1.40 (non-compressible)
Normal: ≥ 0.70
Abnormal: < 0.70
Exercise ABI: Perform when resting ABI is borderline (0.91–0.99) and symptoms suggest PAD
Drop in ABI ≥ 20% post-exercise = hemodynamically significant PAD
Fontaine / Rutherford Classification:
Fontaine
Rutherford
Clinical
Severity
I
0
Asymptomatic
Mild
IIa
1
Mild claudication (> 200 m)
Mild
IIb
2–3
Moderate-to-severe claudication
Moderate
III
4
Rest pain
Severe
IV
5–6
Tissue loss (ulceration, gangrene)
CLTI
Step 2: Medical Management (All PAD Patients)
Cardiovascular Risk Reduction (Class I for all PAD patients):
COMPASS trial: rivaroxaban 2.5 mg BID + aspirin 100 mg daily — superior to aspirin alone for PAD patients (28% reduction in MALE, 24% reduction in MACE)
Consider COMPASS regimen for stable PAD without high bleeding risk
Supervised exercise therapy: > structured walking program (30–45 min, 3×/week, minimum 12 weeks) — Class I, comparable benefit to revascularization for claudication
Step 3: Non-Invasive Vascular Testing
Segmental Pressures and Pulse Volume Recordings (PVR):
Class I–IIa: anticoagulate with heparin; plan revascularization
Class IIb: emergent revascularization (thrombectomy, thrombolysis, or bypass)
Class III: irreversible; consider primary amputation
Step 5: Surveillance and Long-Term Management
Post-Revascularization Surveillance:
Intervention
Surveillance Protocol
Endovascular (stent)
Duplex at 1, 6, 12 months, then annually
Surgical bypass (vein)
Duplex at 1, 3, 6, 12 months, then annually
Surgical bypass (prosthetic)
Duplex at 3, 6, 12 months, then annually
Long-Term Monitoring:
ABI measurement annually (or with symptom change)
Cardiovascular risk factor reassessment at each visit
Wound healing assessment for CLTI patients (weekly until healed)
Foot care education and podiatric referral for diabetic patients
Checkpoint B: Post-Draft Alignment (Mandatory)
Is the ABI documented and correctly interpreted?
Is the severity classified by Fontaine/Rutherford?
Are all cardiovascular risk reduction therapies addressed?
Is supervised exercise therapy prescribed for claudication patients?
Is the revascularization decision supported by objective hemodynamic and anatomic data?
Quality Audit
ABI measured and interpreted (or TBI if non-compressible)
Exercise ABI performed for borderline resting ABI
PAD severity classified (Fontaine/Rutherford)
Pulse examination documented (femoral through pedal)
Antiplatelet therapy initiated or documented
High-intensity statin prescribed
Smoking cessation addressed with pharmacotherapy options
BP target < 130/80 with ACEi/ARB preferred
Supervised exercise therapy prescribed for claudication
Cilostazol considered (no HF contraindication)
COMPASS regimen (low-dose rivaroxaban + aspirin) considered
Non-invasive imaging appropriate for clinical stage
CLTI assessed with WIfI classification if tissue loss present
Revascularization indication and approach documented
Surveillance protocol assigned post-intervention
Guidelines
Screen for PAD with ABI in patients ≥ 65, or ≥ 50 with diabetes or smoking history — PAD is underdiagnosed because many patients are asymptomatic.
A non-compressible ABI (> 1.40) does NOT rule out PAD — use toe-brachial index, which is unaffected by medial calcification.
Supervised exercise therapy is a Class I recommendation for claudication and should be offered before revascularization — studies show comparable improvement in walking distance.
Cilostazol is the only FDA-approved medication for claudication symptom relief — do not use in patients with any degree of heart failure.
The COMPASS trial regimen (rivaroxaban 2.5 mg BID + aspirin) should be considered for all stable PAD patients to reduce major adverse limb and cardiovascular events.
For CLTI, multidisciplinary limb salvage teams (vascular surgery, podiatry, wound care, endovascular) improve outcomes — avoid uncoordinated referrals.
Smoking cessation is the single most impactful intervention for PAD progression — document cessation counseling and pharmacotherapy at every encounter.
Post-revascularization duplex surveillance is essential — early detection of restenosis allows reintervention before graft/stent failure and limb loss.