Vascular-first assessment
Perfusion is considered before treatment decisions, because debriding or compressing an ischemic limb can cause real harm.
Arterial ulcer care · Clarkson Valley
Arterial wounds punish aggressive treatment. Our clinicians treat arterial and mixed-etiology ulcers the right way around: vascular status first, cautious wound bed care, no compression without arterial assessment, and fast vascular referral when poor perfusion — not the dressing — is the real problem. In Clarkson Valley, that means treating patients at home, in senior living, and in skilled nursing facilities near Ellisville, Chesterfield, and west county physician offices — without asking anyone to arrange transport to a wound clinic.
Start care or send a referral
Call 314-325-0126 or send a referral. Tell us where the patient is and what the wound is doing — we handle verification, scheduling, and updates back to you.
What treatment involves
Perfusion is considered before treatment decisions, because debriding or compressing an ischemic limb can cause real harm.
Conservative management of dry, stable tissue and careful decisions about when debridement is and isn't appropriate.
Many leg ulcers are both venous and arterial. We balance compression and protection based on the vascular picture.
When the wound needs blood flow, we help get the patient to vascular surgery quickly — that referral is often the treatment.
Where we see patients
Bedside visits for Clarkson Valley patients with mobility limits, transportation barriers, or caregiver strain.
Assisted living and memory care residents, with findings shared with the community's care staff.
Individual referrals or scheduled weekly wound rounds for the whole building.
Learn moreFollow-up that starts within days of discharge — before the wound plan falls through the cracks.
Learn moreQuestions
Compression on a poorly perfused limb can worsen ischemia. Arterial status has to be assessed before compression is considered.
Some can, with meticulous care and risk-factor control — but many need vascular intervention to restore blood flow. Recognizing that early is part of good wound care.
Coverage depends on the plan and the clinical situation. Call us and we'll walk you through it before care begins.
Yes — Clarkson Valley is inside our core Greater St. Louis service area, and our clinicians see patients there at home and in facilities. Call 314-325-0126 and we'll confirm scheduling for your address.
Start care
Call 314-325-0126 or send a referral. Read more about how we treat this wound type or see all wound care in Clarkson Valley.