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Lower Extremity Fibromuscular Dysplasia.
Angiology 2016 January 2
Fibromuscular dysplasia (FMD), a disease well described in the renal and cerebrovascular circulations, also manifests in the lower extremity (LE) arteries. This study reports on the clinical presentation, imaging findings, and treatment of patients with LE FMD seen at a single center. Over a 7-year span, 100 of 449 patients with FMD had imaging of the LE arteries, of which 62 were found to have LE FMD (13.8% of the entire FMD cohort including patients with and without LE imaging). The majority of patients were women (96.8%), with an average age of 52 ± 11.3 years at the time of diagnosis. All patients had FMD present in another vascular bed, most commonly in the renal (80.6%) and extracranial carotid arteries (79.0%). Most patients had multifocal FMD (95.2%) and bilateral LE disease (69.4%), with the external (87.1%), common (19.4%), and internal (11.3%) iliac arteries most commonly affected. Presenting symptoms of LE involvement included claudication (22.6%), atypical leg symptoms (14.5%), and dissection (6.5%), but most patients were asymptomatic (71.0%). Nearly all patients were managed conservatively (98.4%) and only 1 patient required intervention.
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