The ABI test is very similar to a standard blood pressure test. During your ABI test:
- You will lie flat during the procedure.
- A technician will place a blood pressure cuff just above your ankle.
- The technician will put an ultrasound probe over the artery. They will use this to listen to the blood flow through the vessel.
- The technician will inflate the blood pressure cuff. They will increase the pressure until the blood stops flowing through the vessel. This may be a little uncomfortable. But it won't hurt.
- The technician will slowly release the pressure in the cuff. The systolic pressure is the pressure at which the blood flow is heard again. That is the part of the blood pressure measurement needed for the ABI.
- The technician will repeat this process on your other ankle and on both of your arms.
- Next, the technician will calculate the ABI. The top number (numerator) is the higher systolic blood pressure found in the ankles. The lower number (denominator) is the higher systolic blood pressure found in the arms.
Sometimes doctors will combine an ABI test with an exercise test. You might have an ABI test done before and right after exercise. This is to see how exercise changes your ABI value.