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    Acute Limb Ischemia Medical Slides

    Generate publication-quality acute limb ischemia lecture slides in 30 seconds. AI-powered content structured for clinical education.

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    Why teach Acute Limb Ischemia?

    Acute limb ischemia has an annual incidence of 1.5 per 10,000 and carries a 10-15% amputation rate and 15-20% mortality at 30 days. The Rutherford classification guides the urgency of intervention, distinguishing viable, marginally threatened, immediately threatened, and irreversibly ischemic limbs. Teaching requires emphasis on the 6-hour golden window for revascularization, differentiation between embolic and thrombotic etiologies, and understanding of reperfusion injury management.

    Sample Lecture Slides

    What AI generates for Acute Limb Ischemia

    Enter “Acute Limb Ischemia” and SlideCraft generates a complete lecture deck with slides like these.

    01The Six Ps: Pain, Pallor, Pulselessness, Paresthesia, Paralysis, and Poikilothermia
    02Rutherford Classification: Categories I (Viable) Through III (Irreversible) and Treatment Implications
    03Etiology: Embolic vs Thrombotic — Clinical Differentiation and Source Identification
    04Emergency Management: Heparin Anticoagulation, CTA Angiography, and Time to Revascularization
    05Revascularization: Catheter-Directed Thrombolysis vs Surgical Thromboembolectomy Decision
    06Reperfusion Injury and Compartment Syndrome: Monitoring, Fasciotomy Indications, and CRUSH Syndrome
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    Acute Limb Ischemia Presentation FAQ

    How should the Rutherford classification guide management in teaching?

    Present the four categories with treatment implications: Category I (Viable) — no sensory/motor deficit, audible arterial Doppler signals, not immediately threatened, allows time for angiography and planned intervention. Category IIa (Marginally threatened) — minimal sensory loss (toes), no motor deficit, inaudible arterial Doppler — urgent revascularization needed. Category IIb (Immediately threatened) — sensory loss beyond toes, mild-moderate motor deficit, inaudible arterial Doppler — emergent revascularization (catheter-directed thrombolysis if onset <14 days, surgical embolectomy if embolic). Category III (Irreversible) — profound sensory/motor loss, muscle rigor, no Doppler signals — amputation (revascularization risks fatal reperfusion injury).

    What embolic vs thrombotic differentiation features should be taught?

    Present the clinical distinction: Embolic — sudden onset (seconds to minutes), no prior claudication, known AF or recent MI, contralateral limb has normal pulses, angiography shows sharp cutoff with minimal collaterals. Thrombotic — more gradual onset (hours to days), history of claudication/PAD, atherosclerotic risk factors, contralateral limb may have diminished pulses, angiography shows diffuse disease with some collaterals. This distinction matters: embolic → surgical embolectomy (Fogarty catheter) is often preferred; thrombotic → catheter-directed thrombolysis or bypass may be needed due to underlying stenotic disease.

    How should reperfusion injury be covered in acute limb ischemia slides?

    Present the reperfusion cascade: ischemic tissue accumulates lactate, potassium, and myoglobin. Upon revascularization: systemic release causes hyperkalemia (cardiac arrest risk), metabolic acidosis, myoglobinuria (rhabdomyolysis → AKI). Compartment syndrome develops in 10-20% post-revascularization. Management: pre-revascularization sodium bicarbonate, aggressive IV hydration (200-300 mL/hr targeting UOP >200 mL/hr), monitor serum K+ and CK, four-compartment fasciotomy if compartment pressure >30 mmHg or within 30 mmHg of diastolic BP. Mannitol may reduce compartment pressures and promote osmotic diuresis.

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