Mild disease presents as intermittent claudication:
More severe disease presents as critical ischaemia, usually, without preceding claudication. Patients tend to be older and less active than typical claudicants. The precise clinical features depend on the site of the arterial stenosis, however symptoms usually develop insidiously over a period of weeks, being manifest initially in the skin of the foot.
The following factors make the diagnosis of vascular claudication more likely (1):
Pain from a spinal or nerve root origin (spinal canal claudication for example) usually produces symptoms not localised to a muscle group, and symptoms are often of weakness or heaviness on walking
Patients with critical ischaemia usually complain of:
On examination:
Untreated, the necrotic tissues may become infected, resulting in wet gangrene, and eventually, septicaemia and death.
Reference:
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