## Correct Answer: C. Ultrasound doppler Ultrasound Doppler is the first-line, non-invasive imaging modality for acute limb pain with suspected vascular pathology. In this clinical scenario of sudden-onset right leg pain, Doppler ultrasound allows **real-time assessment of blood flow velocity and direction** in peripheral arteries and veins, making it ideal for detecting acute arterial occlusion (thrombosis, embolism) or deep vein thrombosis (DVT). The investigation combines B-mode imaging (anatomical visualization) with Doppler spectral analysis and color flow mapping, enabling clinicians to identify flow disturbances, absent signals, or reversed flow patterns within seconds. In Indian clinical practice, Doppler is the standard first investigation for acute limb ischemia and suspected DVT because it is bedside-available, repeatable, operator-dependent but highly sensitive in experienced hands, and requires no contrast or radiation. It guides urgent referral for thrombolysis or thrombectomy if arterial occlusion is confirmed. The image likely shows characteristic Doppler findings—either absent arterial flow signals (acute arterial occlusion) or echogenic thrombus with absent compressibility (DVT)—which are pathognomonic for vascular emergency requiring immediate intervention. ## Why the other options are wrong **A. Digital subtraction angiography** — While DSA is the gold-standard invasive imaging for vascular anatomy and is used for definitive diagnosis and therapeutic intervention (thrombolysis, angioplasty), it is NOT the first-line investigation. DSA carries risks of contrast nephropathy, arterial puncture complications, and radiation exposure. In acute limb pain, Doppler is performed first to confirm vascular pathology and guide the decision for angiography. DSA is reserved for cases where intervention is planned, not for initial screening. **B. Plethysmography** — Plethysmography measures changes in limb volume or blood flow indirectly and is useful for assessing overall perfusion status or detecting DVT by impedance changes, but it provides NO anatomical detail and cannot localize the site of occlusion or visualize thrombus. It is less sensitive and specific than Doppler ultrasound. In acute presentations requiring urgent localization and characterization of vascular pathology, Doppler is far superior. **D. MR angiography** — MR angiography provides excellent anatomical detail and is useful for chronic vascular disease or when ultrasound is inconclusive, but it is time-consuming, requires patient cooperation, and is not available emergently in most Indian hospitals. In acute limb ischemia or DVT, the delay in obtaining MRA can be dangerous. Doppler is faster, bedside-available, and does not require contrast or special positioning. ## High-Yield Facts - **Doppler ultrasound** is the first-line investigation for acute limb pain with suspected arterial occlusion or DVT—no radiation, no contrast, bedside-available. - **Absent arterial flow signals** on Doppler indicate acute arterial occlusion (thrombosis, embolism); **absent compressibility** of veins indicates DVT. - **Color flow mapping** in Doppler shows flow direction and velocity; reversed or turbulent flow indicates stenosis or occlusion. - **DSA (digital subtraction angiography)** is reserved for therapeutic intervention (thrombolysis, thrombectomy), not initial screening in acute limb ischemia. - **Sensitivity of Doppler** for DVT is >95% in experienced hands; for arterial occlusion, it approaches 100% when combined with clinical assessment. ## Mnemonics **DOPPLER FIRST in Acute Limb Pain** **D**etect flow (real-time) → **O**btain anatomy (B-mode) → **P**erfusion status (spectral analysis) → **P**lan intervention (DSA if needed) → **L**imit delay (bedside) → **E**mergency triage → **R**epeat if needed. Use Doppler FIRST in acute limb ischemia; reserve DSA for intervention. **ABSENT FLOW = DOPPLER DIAGNOSIS** **A**rterial occlusion → absent pulsatile flow. **B**enign DVT → absent compressibility + echogenic thrombus. **S**tenosis → turbulent/reversed flow. **E**mergency → call vascular surgeon. **N**o delay → Doppler is bedside. **T**herapy → thrombolysis/thrombectomy based on Doppler findings. ## NBE Trap NBE may pair acute limb pain with DSA to lure students into choosing the "gold-standard" imaging, forgetting that Doppler is the **first-line screening** tool that guides the decision for invasive angiography. The trap exploits confusion between "best imaging" (DSA) and "first investigation" (Doppler). ## Clinical Pearl In Indian emergency departments, a bedside Doppler by a trained radiologist or vascular surgeon can confirm acute arterial occlusion or DVT within 5–10 minutes, allowing immediate referral for thrombolysis (within the 6–8 hour window for acute limb ischemia). This speed and accessibility make Doppler the lifeline investigation for acute limb pain in resource-limited settings. _Reference: Bailey & Love Ch. 51 (Vascular Surgery); Harrison Ch. 243 (Peripheral Arterial Disease)_
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