Arterial vs Venous Ulcer
Understanding Severe Vascular Disease
- Causes of arterial and venous ulcers
- Difference between arterial & venous ulcers
- Arterial & venous ulcer symptoms and signs
- Arterial & venous ulcers treatment options
- Who to see about your vascular ulcer

It is important to know arterial vs venous ulcer differences. Progressive vascular disease affects millions of individuals worldwide. In the US alone over 8.5 million individuals suffer from peripheral arterial disease (PAD) and more than 6 million have chronic venous insufficiency (CVI) [1,2]. Over many years, these diseases injure arteries and veins and disrupt healthy blood flow in the body. This eventually damages tissues such as muscles, nerves, and skin that rely on this blood supply. As the disease progresses, clinically complex symptoms like pain, functional limitations, and skin ulceration may occur.
In fact, vascular disease causes >90% of chronic leg ulcers, with approximately 70% caused by venous insufficiency, 5-10% caused by arterial disease, and up to 26% having a mixed arterial and venous disease [3,4]. These facts may be particularly surprising if you’ve looked to a dermatologist, podiatrist, or a wound specialist in the past to manage ulcers.
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Dr. Michael Lalezarian
What Causes Arterial vs Venous Ulcers?
Arteries and veins work together to bring blood towards and away from all parts of the body. Dysfunction of either part of this system can have the common outcome of skin ulceration. There are differences between arterial and venous ulcer causes, so read below.
What Causes Arterial Ulcers?
What Causes Venous Ulcers?
Difference Between Arterial and Venous Ulcers
While destruction of the skin and underlying tissues is a feature of both diseases, the differences between arterial and venous ulcers are clinically different in terms of how they present, what they look like, and what the affected individual experiences. It is possible to have mixed arterial and venous disease. Learn more about the differences between arterial and venous ulcers below.
Arterial Ulcer Symptoms & Signs
Arterial ulcer symptoms and signs are often characterized by aching pain that is worsened by activity and relieved with rest [5]. With severe disease, pain can persist even at rest. There is also an increased amount of destruction of the skin that causes it to breakdown and form ulcers. Arterial ulcers normally occur past the point of compromised blood supply, usually at the farthest parts of the body such as feet, toes, fingers, legs, side of the ankle, and areas of pressure to the skin. Arterial ulcers may be shallow or deep with sharp “punched out” borders. Oftentimes, the wound base is grey or yellow with associated gangrene and eschar (dry dark scab). Tissue surrounding the wound may be itchy, pale, and shiny [4,9,10]. These characteristics are very distinct from venous disease.
Venous Ulcer Symptoms & Signs
Venous ulcer symptoms and signs have a wide variety. Initially, patients experience edema, or swelling, past the area of blockage, fatigue, itching, cramping, and pain that improves with rest and leg elevation [2]. Importantly, venous symptoms are not associated with exercise. As the severity increases, other signs of venous insufficiency are observed, such as spider veins or “telangiectasias”, varicose veins, constant swelling, fat destruction or “lipodermatosclerosis”, and destructive skin changes usually at the lower third of the leg, but anywhere between the knee and ankle [4,9,10,11]. Skin at this point often appears pale, hard, hyperpigmented, hairless, and thin or ulcerated [4]. Venous ulcers are shallow and irregularly shaped with red granular tissue, fibrinous material, and sometimes calcification. [3,9] Pain is usually less severe with venous ulcers than arterial ulcers. Arterial ulceration is also associated with greater clinical severity and comorbidity. See venous insufficiency pictures.
Arterial vs Venous Ulcers Treatment Options
Vascular ulcer treatments focus on healing not only the visible ulcer, but also addressing the underlying disease processes that created them. Arterial and venous ulcer treatment approaches differ greatly, care must be taken in both cases to minimize the risk of infection and manage active wounds.
Arterial Ulcer Treatment
Venous Ulcer Treatment
Venous disease treatment is centered on reducing swelling through leg elevation and compression therapy, eliminating varicose veins, and improving flow in the deep veins if necessary. [2,4] Management also includes lifestyle changes such as exercise and weight loss to improve blood flow through the veins. Varicose veins can be addressed with minimally invasive vein closure or surgical vein stripping. Varicose vein treatment alone may be sufficient to allow venous ulcers to heal, but for more progressive disease that fails to respond to minimally invasive strategies, surgical options may be offered. For example, valves within deep veins can be fixed using reconstruction and transplantation; or bypass surgery may be offered in the case of an intractable flow obstruction [2,7]. Read more about venous ulcer treatment.
Your Partner in Vascular Care
Who Treats Vascular Ulcers?
Vascular Ulcer Care in Los Angeles
Lower Extremity Arterial Disease
Peripheral Arterial Disease Treatment
What Are Arterial Ulcers?
Vascular Specialist in Los Angeles
Learn more about Los Angeles Vascular Specialist Dr. Michael Lalezarian.
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