Objectifying Exercise Ischemia in Peripheral Vascular Disease: A Study in 120 Patients
- 1 June 1990
- journal article
- research article
- Published by SAGE Publications in Angiology
- Vol. 41 (6) , 469-478
- https://doi.org/10.1177/000331979004100608
Abstract
This study presents the results of transcutaneous oxygen pressure (TcPO2) monitoring during a treadmill test walk performed in the early stages of peripheral obliterative vascular disease. The study population consisted of a first group of 50 known arteriopathic patients presenting, on questioning, with intermittent claudication; a second group of 50 known arteriopathic patients void of any symptoms of intermittent claudication; and a third group, which was a control cohort of 20 nonarteriopathic, nonclaudicating patients. Though resting TcPO 2 cannot be used to aid the clinical diagnosis of exercise ischemia it may be useful in revealing asymptomatic chronic resting ischemia (9% of cases in this series). On the other hand, a posteffort (recovery phase) fall in TcPO2 had a predictive positive diagnostic accuracy for ischemia on exercise in 99% of the cases reported here versus 87% for clinical appraisal. In the light of these results, TcPO2 measurements coupled to a treadmill test walk perfectly ascertain exercise ischemia in arteriopathic patients, whether asymptomatic or not, and avoid the false-positive results obtained by clinical evaluation.This publication has 3 references indexed in Scilit:
- Transcutaneous Oxygen Tension (TcPO2) Measurement as a Diagnostic Tool in Patients with Peripheral Vascular DiseaseAngiology, 1988
- Assessment of peripheral vascular obliterative disease by transcutaneous oxygen tension testsEuropean Journal of Vascular Surgery, 1988
- Use of a Transcutaneous PO2 Regional Perfusion Index to Quantify Tissue Perfusion in Peripheral Vascular DiseaseAnnals of Surgery, 1983