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Barry Gibson-Smith Anniesland Medical Practice

Leg Ulcers

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Leg Ulcers. Barry Gibson-Smith Anniesland Medical Practice. Case 1. A 63year old presents with an 8 week history of a non healing area on her shin. She describes that it started after she bumped her leg on a chair. She has been dressing it herself. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Leg Ulcers

Barry Gibson-Smith Anniesland Medical Practice

Page 2: Leg Ulcers
Page 3: Leg Ulcers

A 63year old presents with an 8 week history of a non healing area on her shin. She describes that it started after she bumped her leg on a chair. She has been dressing it herself.

What more from her history do you want to know?

Page 4: Leg Ulcers

Ulcer – painful, discharge, smell, itchy, change in size,

PMHx –Venous disease, previous DVT, Arterial disease – IHD, PVD, CVA Diabetic Auto-immune – RA, SLE, Inflam BD, Cancer – general health Renal disease Medication – new? immunosuppressants

Page 5: Leg Ulcers

Established from Hx

• Venous veins• Obesity• Poor mobility

Your working diagnosis is Venous Ulceration. What signs in the leg would support this?

Page 6: Leg Ulcers

Signs may include: Common site is the medial lower aspect of the

calf especially over the malleolus. Varicose veins Chronic lymphoedema Pigmentation Stasis dermatitis (scratched, dry or weeping

patches) Atrophie blanche (scarring with prominent

tortuous capillaries) Lipodermatosclerosis (firm to hard induration) Multiple ulcers may occur.

Page 7: Leg Ulcers
Page 8: Leg Ulcers

What are you going to do for this lady who you suspect has venous ulceration of her lower leg?

Page 9: Leg Ulcers

•Ankle Brachial Pressure Index (ABPI) by using a Doppler probe to measure pressure in the arm and the ankle. The normal value 0.92 to 1.3. •Peripheral pulses not reliable•ABPI is less than 0.9, there is likely to be arterial disease. Levels of less than 0.5 indicate severe arterial disease. • Caution in diabetics

Page 10: Leg Ulcers

Treatment of/with•Cellulitis•Oedema•Leg elevation•Improve mobility•Dermatitis•Compression bandaging•Aspirin and pentoxyphyline•Avoid – sensitisers, antimicrobials, swabbing, fancy dressings

Page 11: Leg Ulcers

•Heavy Smoker•Hx of IHD•Hx of intermittent claudication•Ulcer for 5 weeks on toe.

•Suspect Arterial Ulcer•What signs would support this?

Page 12: Leg Ulcers

Signs- Usually feet, toes, heels involved and

painful Punched out appearance Associated with cold white or bluish, shiny

feet. Poor peripheral pulses. Do ABPI

Page 13: Leg Ulcers

His ABPI is 0.8 What will you do for him?

Page 14: Leg Ulcers

Referral CVS risk assessment – aspirin, BP, CKD,

cholesterol, ?diabetes Exercise – collateral circulation Simple dressings Analgesia Warning advice - gangrene

Page 15: Leg Ulcers

A 47 year old lady with 5 year Hx of Rheumatoid arthritis currently on DMARDs therapy. Develops ulcer on lower leg after simple knock.

What type of ulcers present in this group?

Page 16: Leg Ulcers

Ulcers in RA Pyoderma gangrenosum Vasculitis Risk of arterial ulcers Cellulitis and associated ulceration Skin cancer ulcers from use of DMARDs

Page 17: Leg Ulcers

Pyoderma gangrenosum

Vasculitis

Page 18: Leg Ulcers

Importance of prompt referral and secondary care involvement

Likely to require high dose steroids Admission required if progressing rapidly

Page 19: Leg Ulcers

An elderly lady presents with a relatively painless ulcer on her lower leg that has been slowly enlarging over several months.

What are your differential diagnoses?

Page 20: Leg Ulcers

Basal cell carcinoma Squamous cell carcinoma Amelanotic melanoma

Requires referral for biopsy and excision Beware of non-healing ulcers

Page 21: Leg Ulcers

A 22year old single mother girl presents with 8 week history of ulcerated area on shin.

Lesion is an unusual shape, what diagnosis should be considered and what signs would support it?

Page 22: Leg Ulcers

Bizarre shape depending on methods used to injure the skin

Linear or geometric pattern Lesions at different stages and range from

red patches, swelling, blisters, denuded areas, crusts, cuts, burns, and scars.

Lesions emerge quickly (overnight) without any prior symptoms or signs

Accessible sites such as hands, arms, buttocks, lower legs

Page 23: Leg Ulcers

A 52 year old diabetic patient presents with a painless ulcer on the sole of his foot.

What type ulcers can diabetics suffer from?

Page 24: Leg Ulcers

Neuropathic ulcers Arterial Venous Necrobiosis lipoidica

Importance of ABPI and examination Involvement of diabetic specialist nurses

and podiatrist at early stage.

Page 25: Leg Ulcers

Leg ulcers are a common presentation in practice and require a multi-disciplinary approach

Importance of careful history and examination

Importance of ABPI assessment Importance of biopsy for non healing

ulcerated lesions