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Ischaemic Leg Ulcer

Annette Høgh*, Daniel Mosgaard Sørensen, Anne Cathrine Nielsen, Ana Lamza, Tanja Planinšek Ručigaj, Mitra Sepehri, Hanne Birke Sørensen, Katariina Noronen, Arindam Bharadwaz, Jaakko Viljamaa

*Corresponding author for this work

Abstract

In this chapter, nine cases are presented to describe the typical development of ischaemic leg ulcers focusing on the key point in diagnostics and treatment. The cases are selected to illustrate the importance of a holistic approach combined with a multidisciplinary set-up. Quick identification of a potential ischaemic component to a chronic wound is essential. The diagnosis of ischaemic leg ulcers is based on clinical characteristics combined with an objective and physical examination of the patient. Peripheral pulse palpation and measurement of the ankle brachial index (ABI) are first-line non-invasive hemodynamic screening for assessing the severity of the peripheral arterial disease (universal atherosclerosis, obstructing the circulation to the lower limbs leading to decreased oxygen inflow by which cell division and tissue survival are compromised and rest pain, necrosis and/or gangrene arise). Furthermore, aggressive local wound treatment both before and after revascularization is essential.

Original languageEnglish
Title of host publicationWound Healing : A Practical Approach
Number of pages28
PublisherSpringer Science + Business Media
Publication date1 Jan 2025
Pages5-32
ISBN (Print)9783031845789
ISBN (Electronic)9783031845796
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 1 Jan 2025

Keywords

  • Amputation
  • Pain control
  • Vascular assessment
  • Vascular reconstruction

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