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Welcome to Season 2 of AMC Clinical Deep Dive!
Exercise programs are a core intervention for increasing walking time and distance in patients with intermittent claudication. This episode explores the NHMRC Level I evidence behind the specific walk–rest cycle: walking at an intensity that elicits severe pain (4/5 level) before resting to resume. Learn the progression from 30 to 60 minutes, 3–5 days per week. Crucially, we cover critical safety checks, including mandatory cardiovascular risk screening and the importance of proper footwear to prevent ulcers and infections. Master the patient reassurance strategy: "ischaemic pain does not damage muscles".
Keywords: #AMCClinicalExam #PeripheralArterialDisease #IntermittentClaudication #OSCEManagement #IMGAustralia #WalkingProgram
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Pro Tip: In your OSCE, specifically mention that the patient should walk until the claudication pain is severe (level 4 out of 5) before resting. This specific detail, along with the mention of CV risk screening, demonstrates the high-level safety and clinical knowledge examiners are seeking.
Also visit
S2E12 - Compression Therapy for Venous Leg Ulcers
S1E148 - Varicose Vein Assessment
👀 If this Clinical-related topic interests you, visit the full webpage for extended notes and additional exam-oriented resources: Mastering PAD
🎧 Episodes in Season 1 (150 clinical scenarios) have been indexed by topic, patient group, discipline, setting, and more to support targeted learning. Use the filters to locate discussions relevant to your study or clinical training.
By MedistandingWelcome to Season 2 of AMC Clinical Deep Dive!
Exercise programs are a core intervention for increasing walking time and distance in patients with intermittent claudication. This episode explores the NHMRC Level I evidence behind the specific walk–rest cycle: walking at an intensity that elicits severe pain (4/5 level) before resting to resume. Learn the progression from 30 to 60 minutes, 3–5 days per week. Crucially, we cover critical safety checks, including mandatory cardiovascular risk screening and the importance of proper footwear to prevent ulcers and infections. Master the patient reassurance strategy: "ischaemic pain does not damage muscles".
Keywords: #AMCClinicalExam #PeripheralArterialDisease #IntermittentClaudication #OSCEManagement #IMGAustralia #WalkingProgram
----------------------------------------------------------------------
Pro Tip: In your OSCE, specifically mention that the patient should walk until the claudication pain is severe (level 4 out of 5) before resting. This specific detail, along with the mention of CV risk screening, demonstrates the high-level safety and clinical knowledge examiners are seeking.
Also visit
S2E12 - Compression Therapy for Venous Leg Ulcers
S1E148 - Varicose Vein Assessment
👀 If this Clinical-related topic interests you, visit the full webpage for extended notes and additional exam-oriented resources: Mastering PAD
🎧 Episodes in Season 1 (150 clinical scenarios) have been indexed by topic, patient group, discipline, setting, and more to support targeted learning. Use the filters to locate discussions relevant to your study or clinical training.