RT Book, Section A1 Shah, Niel A1 Ameen, Muhammad A1 Saad, Muhammad A2 Saad, Muhammad A2 Bhandari, Manoj A2 Vittorio, Timothy J. SR Print(0) ID 1166697426 T1 10 Real Cases on Peripheral Artery Disease and Carotid Artery Disease: Diagnosis, Management, and Follow-Up T2 Patient Management in the Telemetry/Cardiac Step-Down Unit: A Case-Based Approach YR 2020 FD 2020 PB McGraw-Hill Education PP New York, NY SN 9781260456998 LK accesscardiology.mhmedical.com/content.aspx?aid=1166697426 RD 2024/03/29 AB A 65-year-old man was sent from the clinic for worsening of left calf severe pain and decrease in exercise tolerance due to left calf pain. The patient had a 3-month history of intermittent left calf pain and denied trauma, back pain, fever, and leg weakness. Otherwise, the medical history was significant for hyperlipidemia. He was a former smoker and stopped smoking 6 months ago; however, he smoked 1 pack of cigarettes per day for the past 40 years before quitting. The patient denied use of alcohol or recreational drugs. His medications were low-dose aspirin and high-intensity atorvastatin. On physical examination, vital signs were normal. Body mass index was 28 kg/m2. Femoral pulses were diminished bilaterally. Popliteal, right dorsalis pedis, and right posterior tibialis pulses were faint. The left dorsalis pedis and posterior tibialis pulses were not palpable. Cardiac examination was normal. Otherwise, the physical examination was unremarkable. The ankle-brachial index was 0.67 on the left and 0.91 on the right. He was enrolled in a supervised exercise program 3 months ago, but the patient reported no improvement despite adherence to the exercise program, and his symptoms progressed. How would you manage this case?