Mesenteric Ischemia

VASCULAR DIGESTIVE BLOOD FLOW CONDITION

Mesenteric ischemia happens when the intestines do not receive enough blood flow. Symptoms may develop suddenly or slowly over time, and prompt evaluation is important when abdominal pain, eating-related symptoms, weight loss, or severe sudden pain raises concern for reduced circulation.

Evaluation & Next Steps

Call: (702) 703-4340
Hours: Mon–Fri: 8am–5pm

Quick Summary

Key Takeaway: Mesenteric ischemia is a circulation problem involving blood flow to the intestines, and sudden severe abdominal pain can be an emergency.
Evaluation focuses on whether symptoms suggest chronic narrowing, acute blockage, or another abdominal condition. Imaging and vascular assessment help guide whether monitoring, medical management, urgent care, or vascular treatment planning is needed.

Understanding Mesenteric Ischemia

What is Mesenteric Ischemia?

Mesenteric ischemia occurs when narrowed or blocked arteries limit blood supply to the intestines. It may happen gradually because of artery disease or suddenly because of a clot or acute blockage.

Why Evaluation Matters

The symptoms can overlap with many digestive conditions, but reduced intestinal blood flow can become serious quickly. Evaluation helps identify warning signs, confirm circulation problems, and determine the safest next step.

Symptoms of Mesenteric Ischemia

Symptoms depend on whether blood flow changes gradually or suddenly, how much of the intestine is affected, and whether there is an acute blockage.

Pain After Eating

Chronic mesenteric ischemia may cause abdominal pain after meals because digestion increases blood-flow demand.

Unplanned Weight Loss

Some patients eat less to avoid pain, which can lead to appetite changes or weight loss.

Nausea or Digestive Symptoms

Bloating, nausea, diarrhea, or changes in bowel habits may occur with reduced intestinal circulation.

Sudden Severe Abdominal Pain

Acute mesenteric ischemia can cause severe pain that feels out of proportion and needs emergency evaluation.

Seek care now if…

Seek emergency care for sudden severe abdominal pain, abdominal pain with fever, vomiting, bloody stool, fainting, confusion, or pain that feels much worse than expected. These symptoms can signal a serious circulation or abdominal emergency.

Causes and Risk Factors

Mesenteric ischemia is usually related to reduced blood flow through the arteries that supply the intestines. The cause may be chronic plaque buildup, a sudden clot, or less commonly low-flow circulation problems.

Common Causes

Chronic disease often develops slowly as arteries narrow over time. Acute disease may happen suddenly and can become dangerous without prompt medical attention.

Risk Factors

Diagnosis and Evaluation

Diagnosis focuses on symptom pattern, vascular risk factors, abdominal findings, and imaging that can evaluate blood flow to the intestines.

Typical Evaluation

What to Bring

Treatment Options

Treatment depends on whether mesenteric ischemia is chronic or acute, which arteries are involved, symptom severity, overall health, and whether urgent intervention is needed.
Related care may include vascular imaging, risk-factor management, medication review, urgent emergency evaluation, and vascular or image-guided treatment planning when appropriate.

Risk Management

Monitoring & Symptom Protection

Vascular / Image-Guided Treatment

Follow-Up Evaluation

Recovery and Follow-Up

Recovery depends on the cause, whether symptoms are chronic or acute, and whether care involves monitoring, medication changes, vascular treatment, or emergency management.

What Helps Most

  • Reporting urgent symptoms rather than waiting through severe pain
  • Managing risk factors such as smoking, cholesterol, blood pressure, and diabetes
  • Keeping imaging follow-up when vascular narrowing is being monitored
  • Following medication guidance including blood thinners when prescribed
  • Coordinating care across vascular, GI, cardiac, and primary care teams

When to Follow Up

  • Eating causes abdominal pain or fear of meals
  • Weight loss develops without another clear cause
  • Nausea or bowel changes continue with vascular risk factors
  • Symptoms worsen quickly or become severe
  • Imaging shows narrowing of mesenteric arteries
  • Medication or treatment planning needs review

Frequently Asked Questions

Mesenteric ischemia is reduced blood flow to the intestines. It can develop slowly from artery narrowing or suddenly from a clot or blockage.

Chronic symptoms may include abdominal pain after eating, food avoidance, nausea, digestive changes, and unplanned weight loss.

Sudden severe abdominal pain, pain with fever, vomiting, bloody stool, fainting, confusion, or symptoms that feel out of proportion need emergency evaluation.

Diagnosis may include symptom review, physical exam, lab review, CT angiography, ultrasound, or other vascular imaging depending on the situation.

Some cases involve risk-factor management and monitoring, while others may require vascular procedures or urgent treatment depending on severity and imaging findings.

Treatment planning may include medication review, risk-factor management, angioplasty, stenting, surgery referral, or emergency care depending on whether symptoms are chronic or acute.

Locations

LVVIS offers vein evaluation and treatment planning at multiple Las Vegas locations. Choose the office that is most convenient when scheduling your visit.

LVVIS West Side Consultation Office

8930 W Sunset Rd, Suite 350
Las Vegas, NV 89148

Consultations and vascular evaluations

LV2 Limb & Vascular Division

8930 W Sunset Rd, Suite 350
Las Vegas, NV 89148

Limb preservation and podiatry partnership care

LVVIS East Procedure Office

2250 E Flamingo Rd, Suite 100
Las Vegas, NV 89119

Procedures, diagnostics, and circulatory care

LVVIS West Side Surgical Center

6120 S Fort Apache Rd, Suite 100
Las Vegas, NV 89148

Advanced vascular and interventional procedures