Unsupervised exercise programs are unlikely to significantly improve patient's quality of life. The benefits of surgery and angioplasty support a relaxation in the indications for investigation and treatment of claudicants. Patients with impaired perceived health should not be denied treatment on the basis of preintervention ankle pressure or walking distance alone.
Pressure measurements remain the gold standard for aortoiliac examination, arteriography providing only morphological information. The limitations of femoral pulse palpation should be appreciated. Although MRA was faster, Duplex examination proved slightly more sensitive to stenoses. At present, colour Duplex provides the best non-invasive assessment of aortoiliac disease and could prevent unnecessary arteriograms.
Hyperhomocysteinaemia is an independent risk factor for the early development of arterial disease. Homocysteine and cardiovascular risk factors were assessed in 41 young and 25 older patients with vascular disease. As homocysteine may act by the generation of free radicals, total antioxidant capacity was measured. Hyperhomocysteinaemia was found in 29 per cent of patients but there was no difference between young and older patients. Homocysteine level was unrelated to other cardiovascular risk factors. Young age, diabetes and hyperhomocysteinaemia were independent risk factors for the failure of vascular procedures (P = 0.006). Patients with hyperhomocysteinaemia had raised total antioxidant capacity. The potential of identifying and treating a subgroup of patients with a poor prognosis deserves further study.
These results uphold the perceived benefits of a GS programme, although the evidence from the non-treated cases in this series reinforces a need for a large, prospective, randomised trial to confirm the case for GS.
Pre-existing vein quality as measured by PIT correlates with the development of neointimal hyperplasia in culture, adding further support to clinical evidence that poor vein quality predisposes to vein graft stenosis due to an inherent susceptibility to intimal hyperplasia.
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