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Friday, July 16, 2010

Assessing the lower-limb arteries

Blood is normally supplied to the leg through a single main artery (Figure 7). This has different names in different parts of the leg: common and external iliac arteries in the lower abdomen, common and superficial femoral arteries in the thigh, and popliteal artery behind the knee. Below the knee it branches into the smaller posterior tibial, peroneal and anterior tibial arteries. The reason for scanning these arteries is to locate and assess any narrowing (stenosis) or blockage (occlusion). A general review of the role of ultrasonic scanning in the diagnosis of peripheral arterial disease is given by Polak [4] .

Figure 7: The main arteries of the lower limb.

Patients are normally referred with claudication (pain on walking, particularly uphill) or with ulcers around the ankle and on clinical examination the ankle pulses are likely to be weak or absent. The main options for treatment are either (a) to encourage the patient to exercise and develop collateral vessels to take blood around the site of disease, (b) to perform angioplasty which involves passing a balloon catheter down the artery and inflating it at the sites of narrowing or blockage to dilate the vessel, or (c) to surgically insert an graft to bypass the diseased portion of the vessel [5] . The clinical information required is therefore the site and severity of any narrowing of the vessel and the site and length of any blockages of the main vessels. In the presence of multiple stenoses, the study can indicate which are causing the more critical restrictions to blood flow. The referring clinician can use this information to decide whether intervention is appropriate, and, if so, whether to proceed to angioplasty or to insert a graft [6] .

The examination starts with the patient lying supine with the head slightly raised. Coupling gel is put on the thigh from groin to knee over the path of the artery. The probe is placed on the skin in the groin and the common femoral artery identified using the colour Doppler display. The scanner is switched to duplex mode, and the blood velocity waveform in the common femoral artery is obtained. The waveform is usually biphasic or triphasic. The peak systolic blood velocity normally lies between 90 and 140 cm/s (ref 3, p 260). Values significantly above this may indicate local stenosis, while values below can indicate low flow caused by proximal or distal occlusion. The presence of any plaque intruding into the lumen is noted, and the degree of stenosis is estimated. (Figure 8) shows a scan of a femoral artery with a small protruding plaque causing about 20% stenosis.


Figure 8: A plaque protruding into the lumen of the common femoral artery. The plaque (PL) is small and is causing about 20% stenosis.

The shape of the waveform is important because a monophasic waveform can indicate proximal disease in the iliac vessels. The biphasic or triphasic waveform occurs because the main blood vessels in the leg are elastic and are dilated by the increased pressure during systole. This creates a reservoir of blood which empties during diastole. The volume of blood in the reservoir is more than enough to supply the limb, and the excess flows back up the vessel into the abdominal aorta creating the reverse flow component (Figure 9). An abnormal monophasic waveform without the reverse component occurs when the volume in the reservoir is insufficient and extra flow is required during diastole. This is usually because an iliac stenosis or occlusion reduces the blood available to fill the reservoir during systole, but may also occur when there is a large flow to the limb caused by exercise or gross infection.

Proximal disease can also be indicated by turbulence in the common femoral artery. Turbulence is created in eddies distal to a tight stenosis, and the eddies then travel downstream with the blood flow. They can be detected as spikes in the blood velocity waveform (Figure 10), usually on the downslope at the end of systole. The turbulence is more likely to be created during peak systole when the local blood velocity is highest, but appears later than this distally because the systolic pressure pulse travels faster than the eddying blood. The delay between peak systole and the appearance of the turbulence in the common femoral artery can give an indication of the site of the proximal iliac stenosis. Jager et al [7] have described the shape of the waveform in the lower-limb arteries and the changes associated with different degrees of stenosis.


Figure 9: Schematic generation of a biphasic waveform. During systole (a), the heart pumps blood into the peripheral vessel and the branches. The peripheral vessel expands. During diastole (b), the vessel contracts. There is more than enough blood in the vessel to supply the periphery, and the excess flows backwards into the more proximal branches. A biphasic waveform is obtained at the point marked with an asterisk.


Figure 10: Turbulence in the common femoral artery. The blood velocity waveform contains spikes (marked I) just after peak systole. These represent turbulence generated from a proximal tight stenosis
The probe is then moved along the artery until the origin of the profunda femoris artery is identified using the colour Doppler display. This is usually just beyond the skin crease in the groin. The blood velocity waveform at the origin is obtained, the waveform shape noted and the presence of any stenosis recorded. The position of the origin can be marked on the skin surface using a water-soluble crayon.
The superficial femoral artery is examined along its length using the colour Doppler display. The colour scale is set so that the normal blood velocity in the vessel is just below the top of the scale. Any increase in velocity caused by a stenosis will therefore go above the scale, causing aliasing and its characteristic display. Whenever a stenosis is suspected, the blood velocity waveform is obtained just proximally and the peak systolic velocity measured. The duplex gate is then moved through the stenosis, monitoring the waveform until the maximum velocity is obtained. A significant stenosis is normally taken to be one that more than doubles the blood velocity [4]. The site of any significant stenosis is marked on the skin surface and the distance from the vessel origin and the increase in velocity recorded. Figure 11 shows a superficial femoral artery stenosis. The plaque causing the stenosis can be seen and the colour Doppler shows aliasing. The peak systolic blood velocity, (Figure 12), increases from 0.26 proximally to 3.90 m/s through the stenosis, an increase by a factor of 15 indicating a very tight stenosis.
Occlusion is characterized by a gradual fall in blood velocity along the vessel as blood is taken away by collateral vessels. The waveform usually becomes monophasic close to the occlusion, and at the blockage the colour Doppler display shows absence of flow. When flow is low, it can be difficult to determine the precise point at which flow ceases, and the operator must ensure that any flow shown is within the vessel rather than along a nearby collateral. When an occlusion is detected, the operator marks the start on the skin, and then continues to track down the artery using the colour Doppler display until flow is again identified in the lumen. The distal end of the occlusion is marked and the length measured.
As the scan progresses down the leg, the artery becomes deeper and can be difficult to image, particularly in larger patients. The vessel is scanned as far down the leg as possible and the blood velocity waveform recorded from this distal site. The position is marked on the skin. To complete the examination of the lower-limb arteries, the patient turns onto their side or front and the popliteal artery is scanned behind the knee. Waveform shape, peak systolic velocity and the presence of plaque are all recorded.
Where the distal superficial femoral artery is deep, there may be a portion of the vessel that is not accessible from the front or the back. This can limit the accuracy of the scan, especially in the adductor canal just above the knee. Problems can also be caused by a vessel with multiple calcified plaques, which block the ultrasound preventing a clear view of the vessel. However, an experienced operator can use other clues such as the presence of turbulence and changes in waveform shape to determine the presence of significant disease. Where there is an occlusion or tight stenosis, collateral vessels re-entering distally can supply blood at high velocity which can mimic a stenosis. The collateral vessel can sometimes be identified by the presence of colour outside the main lumen.



Figure 11: A superficial femoral artery stenosis. The colour image shows aliasing, a sharp transition from maximum speed away from the probe (light blue) to maximum towards (yellow). The lumen is narrower at the stenosis and the brighter echoes in the near wall show the presence of plaque, which is causing shadowing to the right of the image.




Figure 12: Velocity waveform through a stenosis. The peak blood velocity through this superficial femoral artery stenosis is greater than 3.9 m/s, compared with 0.26 m/s just proximal to the stenosis. This increase in velocity shows a very tight stenosis.

A full lower-limb scan may be time-consuming since the whole length of the artery must be scanned carefully. About 30 minutes is needed for a full unilateral study and 50 for a bilateral study. Other tests are sometimes performed at the same time, and it is common to include a measurement of the ankle/brachial pressure index (ABPI) which extends the study by about 10 minutes [8] [9] [10] .
The ABPI (ratio of ankle arterial systolic blood pressure to brachial pressure) is normally greater than 1.0, and ratios lower than 0.90 at rest are usually considered abnormal and indicative of lower-limb arterial disease [8]. However, an artifactually low reading may be obtained if the ankle signals are weak and of low amplitude. Headphones can be useful to ensure that the signal is heard as soon as it returns as the cuff pressure is reduced. Artifactually high readings may also be obtained if the leg arteries are calcified and cannot be compressed. This happens particularly in diabetic patients. In these cases, the arterial waveform at the ankle can help to exclude disease since a biphasic waveform, with both forward and reverse components, indicates absence of severe flow-limiting disease. For all these pressure measurements, it is important that the cuff is the correct size [11] . Ideally, the ratio of cuff width to limb circumference should be around 0.4, and it is good practice to have a large cuff available for large or swollen limbs. Reducing errors is especially important if ABPI is the only measurement being made and the patient is not proceeding to duplex scan.
Proximal and distal arterial scanning

If iliac disease is suspected, either from clinical examination or from a monophasic common femoral waveform, the aorto-iliac segment can be scanned [12] . A 3.5 MHz probe is usually used to give better penetration and a wider field of view. Access to the vessels can be difficult if overlying bowel and bowel gas block the ultrasound. Some centres give an enema before scanning this region, but in thin patients a satisfactory examination is often possible without bowel preparation. The operator is again looking for narrowing or blockage of the artery and the same criteria are used. If distal disease is suspected, some of the small arteries below the knee can be examined. The posterior tibial artery is usually accessible just above the ankle from the medial aspect, and can be traced up the leg as it gets deeper. The artery runs parallel to a pair of veins (Figure 13) and this can aid identification. The operator is again looking for evidence of stenosis or occlusion, but these vessels are small and close to the limit of resolution of all but the most modern scanners, and absence of detected flow may indicate lack of sensitivity of the equipment rather than occlusion.

Figure 13: Peroneal artery and paired veins. The arterial flow, shown in red, is from left to right with a component towards the probe. The venous flow, shown in blue, is in the opposite direction. The anterior and posterior tibial arteries also lie between paired veins.




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