Biomedicines (Aug 2023)

Examination of Lower Limb Microcirculation in Diabetic Patients with and without Intermittent Claudication

  • Katalin Biró,
  • Barbara Sándor,
  • Kinga Tótsimon,
  • Katalin Koltai,
  • Krisztina Fendrik,
  • Dóra Endrei,
  • Judit Vékási,
  • Kálmán Tóth,
  • Gábor Késmárky

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/biomedicines11082181
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11, no. 8
p. 2181

Abstract

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Intermittent claudication is a frequent complaint in lower extremity artery disease, but approximately two thirds of patients are asymptomatic, most of which are diabetic patients. Non-invasive angiological and microrheological tests on diabetic subjects with and without intermittent claudication were performed in the present study. In total, 98 diabetic patients were included and divided into two groups: 20 patients (63.5 ± 8.8 years, 55% men, 45% women) had intermittent claudication, 78 patients (65.5 ± 9.3 years, 61.5% men, 38.5% women) were asymptomatic. Hand-held Doppler ultrasound examination, transcutaneous tissue partial oxygen pressure (tcpO2) measurement, Rydel–Seiffer tuning fork tests, and 6-min walk tests were performed, and erythrocyte aggregation was investigated. Ankle–brachial index (p 2, measured during provocation tests (p p p 2 measurement. Claudication can be associated with worse hemodynamic and hemorheological conditions in diabetic patients; however, severe ischemia can also develop in asymptomatic subjects. Non-invasive vascular tests can detect ischemia, which highlights the importance of early instrumental screening of the lower limbs.

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