Lower Extremity Arterial Disease in Sports
The recent description of exercise-induced intimal fi brosis affecting mainly the iliac artery (and therefore usually described as external iliac artery endofibrosis) has dramatically changed the diagnostic approach of unexplained recurrent lower limb exercise pain, espe cially in cyclists. Because...
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Veröffentlicht in: | The American journal of sports medicine 1997-07, Vol.25 (4), p.581-584 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | The recent description of exercise-induced intimal fi brosis affecting mainly the iliac artery (and therefore usually described
as external iliac artery endofibrosis) has dramatically changed the diagnostic approach of unexplained recurrent lower limb
exercise pain, espe cially in cyclists. Because arterial disease is often as sociated with the aftereffect of various concomitant
musculotendinous lesions, several months may pass before an arterial origin is suspected. The arterial origin of the pain
must not be eliminated on normal ankle-to- arm index or normal Doppler velocity profiles at rest. Ultrasound examinations
taken at rest may show the lesions in 80% of endofibrotic patients and allow for the diagnosis of popliteal entrapment syndrome
during dorsiflexion of the foot. However, the hemodynamic consequences of a stenosis on the aortoiliofemoral axis can only
be proved by measurement of the ankle- to-arm index after exercise. A cutoff of this index |
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ISSN: | 0363-5465 1552-3365 |
DOI: | 10.1177/036354659702500424 |