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Intermittent claudication in a professional rugby player
Alan E. Bray, MD, Warren A. Lewis, DMU Journal of Vascular Surgery Volume 15, Issue 4, Pages (April 1992) DOI: / (92)90013-X Copyright © 1992 Society for Vascular Surgery and the North American Chapter, International Society for Cardiovascular Surgery Terms and Conditions
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Fig. 1 Continuous-wave Doppler waveforms of right common femoral artery illustrate a normal triphasic pattern at rest and a grossly abnormal tracing suggestive of severe turbulence after exercise. Journal of Vascular Surgery , DOI: ( / (92)90013-X) Copyright © 1992 Society for Vascular Surgery and the North American Chapter, International Society for Cardiovascular Surgery Terms and Conditions
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Fig. 2 Duplex scan of right external iliac and common femoral arteries at rest. A 50% increase in peak systolic velocity indicated a 20% to 49% diameter stenosis in the mid to distal external iliac artery. Journal of Vascular Surgery , DOI: ( / (92)90013-X) Copyright © 1992 Society for Vascular Surgery and the North American Chapter, International Society for Cardiovascular Surgery Terms and Conditions
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Fig. 3 Duplex scan of right external iliac and common femoral arteries after exercise. A peak velocity of >400 cm/sec with poststenotic turbulence demonstrated a hemodynamically significant stenosis. Journal of Vascular Surgery , DOI: ( / (92)90013-X) Copyright © 1992 Society for Vascular Surgery and the North American Chapter, International Society for Cardiovascular Surgery Terms and Conditions
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Fig. 4 Completion angiogram of right external iliac artery after angioplasty. Journal of Vascular Surgery , DOI: ( / (92)90013-X) Copyright © 1992 Society for Vascular Surgery and the North American Chapter, International Society for Cardiovascular Surgery Terms and Conditions
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