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Interactive Learning: Click on the words 1-7 to expose the characteristics of venous and arterial disease
Dull and Constant
Sharp, intermittent claudication. You walk and pain occurs, you stop and pain goes away
Puse is present but hard to fill due to edema. Remember that pulse is arterial flow. The problem is venous.
 Pulse is decreased or absent. Remember there is no or ↓ arterial blood flow
Yes! Edema occurs since blood pools or there is venous stasis
No edema due to no or decreased blood flow
Temp: Warm
Color: Ruddy, brownish, yellowish
Exrtremity is Pale, HAIRLESS, and skin is thin due to DECREASED oxygen. Yes, arterial blood carries the nutrients to tissues.
There may be venous stasis wounds w/irregular shape. Usually no gangrene. Gangrene occurs due to NO arterial blood flow.
Arterial sores are regular in shape, red round sores. Gangrene due to no or decreased blood flow.
Elevate legs to increase venous return and wear elastic stockings.
Dangle legs to ↑ blood flow. Let gravity do its thing
Elastic stockings, Leg elevation, daily walking, AVOID standing for prolonged periods of time, and weight Management.
No smoking, aspirin, vasodilators, good skin care to prevent ulcers, avoid tight shoes/clothes, & surgery such as femoral-popliteal bypass.
Drag the characteristic of the right to the appropriate box on the left. It is a characteristic of PAD or PVD?
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Buerger’s disease (also known as thromboangiitis obliterans) affects blood vessels in the body, most commonly in the arms and legs. Blood vessels swell, which can prevent blood flow, causing clots to form. Client experience intermittent claudication or pain with walking. This can lead to pain, tissue damage, and even gangrene (dead tissue). Risk factors: smoking, males, elderly, ↑ cholesterol, ↑ coagulation state, ↑ triglycerides, and diabetes. Tx vasodilators, avoid fatty foods, and amputations if gangrene is present.