CV
Traumatic Acute Limb Ischemia
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Traumatic Acute Limb Ischemia
, Extremity Vascular Injury, Extremity Vascular Compromise in Trauma
See Also
Acute Limb Ischemia
Extremity Injury
Findings
Hard Signs of Vascular Injury (indications for emergent surgery)
Hypotension
or shock
Rapidly expanding or pulsatile
Hematoma
Pulse
less limb (or obviously ischemia)
Palpable thrill or audible bruit (
Trauma
tic AV-fistula)
Soft Signs of Vascular Injury (indications for further diagnostics)
Large volume blood loss at scene of injury
Fracture
Hematoma
(common, expected)
Pulse
discrepancy (when compared with opposite extremity)
Precautions
Start with a thorough exam and bedside
Ankle
Brachial Index
Diagnostics
Ankle
Brachial Index (or
Arterial Pressure Index
)
First-line study
May be performed with
Blood Pressure
cuff (or with
Doppler Ultrasound
)
ABI (or API) >=0.9 excludes major arterial injury
ABI (or API) <0.9 indicates Extremity CTA
Extremity CTA
Indications in patients stable enough for CT
Soft signs (esp. pulse discrepancy)
Significant
Soft Tissue Injury
and maceration with risk of distal extremity ischemia
High-mechanism, multisystem
Trauma
Positive CTA
Consult vascular surgery early in presentation
Negative CTA
Negative CTA is associated with a low likelihood of major vascular injury
Observe patients with frequent pulse checks if high level of suspicion for vascular injury
CTA
Pelvis
without arterial blush reliably excludes significant arterial bleeding from
Pelvis
References
Werner and Kim (2026) Extremity CTA in
Trauma
, EM:RAP, 2/16/2026
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