Noninvasive assessment of the peripheral vascular system
J. M. Van De Water, B. E. Mount, W. F. Roettinger 2nd and L. A. Trudell
Forty-five limbs varying clinically from normal through moderate to
severely ischemic were studied by noninvasive measurements of both arterial
blood pressure and perfusion. From the values plotted on a two-coordinate
system, they arranged themselves well into three clinical categories: (1)
normal, (2) intermittent claudication, and (3) ischemia or ulceration and
rest pain. Good clinical responses to arterial reconstruction were
corroborated by postoperative measurements. Reinforcing the results of one
measurement with those of the other has provided an objective, numerical,
and graphic basis for decisions regarding the advisability of angiography
or arterial reconstructive procedures or both. To date, almost 400 patients
have been evaluated by these techniques.