Do I have peripherial arterial disease
Answered by
Lee Kirksey, MD - Peripheral Arterial Disease, PAD, Cardiovascular Disease, stroke, treatment, angioplasty, spider veins, laser ablation, wound treatment, surgery, leg pain, Prevention, Varicose veins
Penn Presbyterian Medical Center of the Univ. of Pennsylvania Healthcare Clinical Assistant Professor at The University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine
Philadelphia - PA
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Thanks for taking the time to respond to my question. After five years of pain and numbness in my foot, I have done a significant amount of research. Certain that I did not just develop P.A.D., my concern is that during my surgery, a stitch or entrapment might of
occurred with the femoral artery or even the abdominal aorta.
About a year ago, a vascular surgeon ran some sort of test on me to determine blood flow in my right leg. All I remember him saying was that the blood flows down my leg fine yet something is causing a problem as the blood flows upward.
Thanks,
Stephen Biggers
***@****
It is unclear when the surgery took place. Your comment that you have had five years of numbness suggests that surgery was five years ago? The approach for spine surgery is around the aorta but it is impossible to throw a stitch thru a blood vessel of that size to occlude the structure. It is possible for some type of retractor placed for exposure to compress the blood vessel.
Regardless of the cause, if your symptoms have been present for five years and you had a test to look at your circulation one year ago by a vascular surgeon that was reported to be normal, that suggests that poor circulation is not likely the cause or your symptoms.
What does your operating spine surgeon think about your symptoms?
Has anyone considered a duplex ultrasound to determine that you dont have a deep venous thromboses. That could potentially cause symptoms of leg swelling, tightness and pain in one leg. Also a consideration for nerve disorders could be investigated with emg