Leg ulcers Flashcards

1
Q

Different aetiologies of ulcer? (6)

A
Venous
Arterial (and mixed)
Neuropathic (most commonly diabetic neuropathy)
Vasculitic
Malignant
Trauma
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2
Q

What is the commonest form of leg ulcer?

A

Venous leg ulcer

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3
Q

What is the essential underlying process leading to venous ulceration?

A

Chronic venous hypertension

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4
Q

What clinical signs are there which indicate chronic venous hypertension? (5)

A
Palpable varicosities
Oedema
Stasis eczema
Hyper pigmentation
Lipodermatosclerosis
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5
Q

What is the underlying cause of persistent venous hypertension?

A

Incompetent valves and ineffective muscle pump (obesity, arthritis, inactivity)

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6
Q

Symptoms of venous hypertension? (6) When are these symptoms typically worse?

A
Pain (burning, aching)
Heaviness
Itching
Cramping
Swelling
Restless legs
Worse after standing, at end of day
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7
Q

Signs of venous hypertension? (4)

A
Brown pigmentation (haemosiderin from red cell breakdown)
Prominent varicose veins
Atrophie blanche (ivory white scarring)
Lipodermatosclerosis (hardened, hyperpigmented skin)
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8
Q

Where is venous ulceration most commonly found?

A

In the “gaiter” area between midcalf and medial malleolus

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9
Q

How do venous ulcers typically appear?

A

Large and shallow, with base of granulation tissue

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10
Q

When should culture-positive ulcers be treated with oral antibiotics?

A

Only if clinical evidence of infection e.g. pyrexia, purulent discharge, rapid extension of the ulcer, surrounding cellulitis, sepsis response

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11
Q

Features which distinguish arterial ulcers from venous? (3)

A

Deeper
May also have claudication and absent pedal pulses
Punched-out appearance

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12
Q

Features which suggest vasculitic ulceration?

A

Start as painful, palpaple purpuric lesions, turning into punched out ulcers

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13
Q

Which type of skin malignancy most commonly presents as an ulcer?

A

Squamous cell carcinoma

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14
Q

Investigations in leg ulcers?

A

Blood glucose
Full blood count to detect anaemia which will delay healing
Ulcer swab if evidence of infection
Colour flow duplex ultrasound to detect venous incompetence
Doppler ultrasound (ABPI)
Investigation of vasculitis (e.g. ANA, FR, CRP)

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15
Q

What does an ABPI of greater than 0.8 suggest?

A

Ulcer is unlikely to be due to arterial disease

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16
Q

What is the mainstay of venous ulcer treatment?

A

Compression bandaging and stockings (after healing)

17
Q

What other measures are used in venous ulcer treatment? (4)

A

Elevation of the affected limb (at least 15cm, two hours every afternoon)
Walking (in moderation)
Diet- weight loss while maintaining adequate nutrition
Local wound care

18
Q

What should the pressure be a) at ankle b) below knee in venous compression bandaging?

A

a) 40mm

b) 25mm