Ankle-Brachial Index (ABI) Calculator
Calculate your ankle-brachial index to assess peripheral artery disease (PAD) risk. Enter your blood pressure measurements below.
Your Results
How to Use This Calculator
You’ll need systolic blood pressure readings from both your right and left arms. These measurements should be taken while you’re lying down, using a blood pressure cuff and Doppler ultrasound device.
For each ankle, two measurements are taken: one at the dorsalis pedis artery (top of your foot) and one at the posterior tibial artery (behind your ankle bone). Enter all four ankle measurements into the calculator.
Click the calculate button. The calculator automatically selects the highest arm pressure and the highest ankle pressure for each leg to compute your ABI values.
You’ll receive separate ABI values for your left and right legs, along with an interpretation of what these numbers mean for your vascular health.
What Does Your ABI Score Mean?
Your ankle-brachial index reveals important information about blood flow in your legs. Here’s what different ranges indicate:
| ABI Value | Interpretation | Recommended Action |
|---|---|---|
| Above 1.4 | Calcified or non-compressible vessels | Consult vascular specialist; common in diabetes |
| 1.0 – 1.4 | Normal range | No action needed |
| 0.9 – 1.0 | Acceptable | Monitor regularly if risk factors present |
| 0.8 – 0.9 | Mild arterial disease | Address risk factors, lifestyle changes |
| 0.5 – 0.8 | Moderate arterial disease | See vascular specialist promptly |
| Below 0.5 | Severe arterial disease | Urgent vascular specialist referral needed |
Why Ankle Pressure Should Be Higher
In healthy individuals, ankle systolic pressure is typically slightly higher than arm pressure due to the amplification effect as blood travels through arteries. This is why normal ABI values range from 1.0 to 1.4. When ankle pressure is lower than arm pressure, it suggests that blood flow to your legs is restricted, which could indicate PAD.
The Science Behind ABI Testing
How the Measurement Works
The ABI test uses a simple formula that compares blood pressure in your ankles to blood pressure in your arms. Healthcare providers use a Doppler ultrasound device, which uses sound waves to detect blood flow, combined with a standard blood pressure cuff.
The calculation is straightforward:
ABI = Highest Ankle Pressure ÷ Highest Arm Pressure
This ratio tells us how well blood is flowing to your lower extremities. A lower ratio suggests that your arteries may be narrowed or blocked, which is the hallmark of peripheral artery disease.
Why Two Measurements Per Ankle?
Each foot has multiple arteries that can be measured. The dorsalis pedis runs along the top of your foot, while the posterior tibial runs behind your inner ankle. Taking both measurements increases accuracy because sometimes one artery may be affected while the other isn’t. Healthcare providers use the higher of the two readings for the most accurate assessment.
Accuracy and Reliability
Studies have shown that ABI testing is highly accurate, with sensitivity of approximately 90% and specificity of 98% in detecting significant arterial stenosis. This makes it one of the most reliable non-invasive tests for diagnosing PAD.
Who Should Get Tested?
Medical organizations recommend ABI testing for specific groups of people who are at higher risk for peripheral artery disease:
Age-Related Recommendations
All individuals age 70 and older should consider ABI testing, regardless of symptoms. PAD becomes more common with age, and early detection allows for timely intervention.
People age 50-69 should get tested if they have risk factors such as diabetes or a history of smoking. These conditions significantly increase PAD risk even in younger individuals.
Symptom-Based Testing
You should discuss ABI testing with your doctor if you experience:
This cramping or aching pain typically occurs in your calves, thighs, or buttocks during physical activity and goes away with rest. It’s one of the most common symptoms of PAD.
If your doctor can’t feel strong pulses in your feet, this could indicate reduced blood flow and warrants ABI testing.
Sores or wounds on your feet or legs that heal slowly or not at all can be a sign of poor circulation.
If your legs or feet appear pale, bluish, or feel colder than the rest of your body, reduced blood flow might be the cause.
Frequently Asked Questions
Risk Factors for Peripheral Artery Disease
Several factors can increase your likelihood of developing PAD. Being aware of these can help you take preventive action:
Smoking
Smoking is the single most significant risk factor for PAD. Smokers are four times more likely to develop PAD than non-smokers. The chemicals in tobacco damage blood vessel walls and promote plaque buildup. Quitting smoking is the most important step you can take to prevent or slow PAD progression.
Diabetes
People with diabetes face a much higher risk of PAD because elevated blood sugar levels can damage blood vessels over time. Approximately one in three people with diabetes over age 50 has PAD. Keeping blood sugar levels well-controlled is essential for prevention.
High Blood Pressure
Hypertension damages artery walls, making it easier for plaque to accumulate. Managing blood pressure through medication and lifestyle changes reduces PAD risk significantly.
High Cholesterol
Elevated cholesterol levels, particularly LDL cholesterol, contribute to atherosclerosis – the buildup of fatty deposits in arteries. This narrowing restricts blood flow to your legs.
Age
PAD risk increases with age. While it can occur at any age, it’s most common in people over 65. However, younger people with multiple risk factors can also develop the condition.
Family History
Having close relatives with PAD, heart disease, or stroke increases your risk, suggesting a genetic component to vascular disease.
Preventing and Managing PAD
Lifestyle Modifications
Making healthy lifestyle changes can significantly reduce your PAD risk or slow its progression:
This is the single most important action you can take. Within weeks of quitting, your circulation begins to improve, and your PAD risk starts to decrease.
Walking programs are particularly effective for PAD. Even if you experience leg pain, supervised exercise therapy can actually improve your symptoms over time by encouraging the development of collateral blood vessels.
Focus on fruits, vegetables, whole grains, lean proteins, and healthy fats. Limit saturated fats, trans fats, sodium, and added sugars to help manage cholesterol and blood pressure.
If you have diabetes, high blood pressure, or high cholesterol, work closely with your healthcare team to keep these conditions well-controlled through medication and lifestyle changes.
Medical Treatments
Your doctor may prescribe medications to manage PAD and reduce complications:
Drugs like aspirin or clopidogrel help prevent blood clots from forming in narrowed arteries.
Statins not only lower cholesterol but also stabilize plaque in arteries, reducing the risk of rupture.
ACE inhibitors and other antihypertensive drugs help protect your blood vessels and reduce strain on your cardiovascular system.
Cilostazol is sometimes prescribed to help improve walking distance by improving blood flow.
When ABI Testing Shows High Values
The Calcification Problem
While most discussions about ABI focus on low values indicating PAD, high values (above 1.4) present their own concerns. When arteries become calcified, they stiffen and don’t compress normally under the blood pressure cuff. This means the cuff has to inflate to much higher pressures to occlude blood flow, resulting in falsely elevated readings.
Who’s at Risk for Calcified Arteries?
Arterial calcification is particularly common in:
Chronic high blood sugar accelerates calcium deposition in arterial walls, leading to what’s called medial arterial calcification.
Kidney dysfunction disrupts mineral balance, promoting calcium buildup in blood vessels.
Arterial stiffness naturally increases with age, though severe calcification still warrants investigation.
What to Do About High ABI
If your ABI is above 1.4, your doctor may recommend alternative tests such as toe-brachial index (TBI) or pulse volume recording, which aren’t affected by arterial calcification. These tests can provide a more accurate assessment of blood flow when standard ABI measurements are unreliable.
ABI Testing vs. Other Vascular Tests
| Test Type | What It Measures | Best Used For |
|---|---|---|
| ABI (Ankle-Brachial Index) | Pressure ratio between ankle and arm | Initial PAD screening and diagnosis |
| TBI (Toe-Brachial Index) | Pressure ratio between toe and arm | Patients with calcified arteries or diabetes |
| Duplex Ultrasound | Blood flow velocity and vessel structure | Locating specific blockages |
| CT Angiography | Detailed arterial imaging with contrast | Pre-surgical planning |
| MR Angiography | Detailed arterial imaging without radiation | When CT contrast is contraindicated |
| Exercise ABI | ABI before and after treadmill walking | Detecting mild PAD not apparent at rest |
Each test has its place in vascular assessment. ABI testing is typically the first step because it’s quick, non-invasive, and highly accurate. If results are abnormal or inconclusive, your doctor will determine which additional tests are appropriate for your situation.
Common Mistakes in ABI Interpretation
Mistake 1: Using Average Instead of Highest Values
The correct method is to use the highest ankle pressure and highest arm pressure – not average values. Using averages can lead to inaccurate results. If your right arm reads 120 mmHg and your left arm reads 130 mmHg, you should use 130 mmHg as your brachial pressure.
Mistake 2: Ignoring Arm Pressure Differences
If there’s a significant difference (more than 10-15 mmHg) between your arm pressures, it could indicate subclavian or axillary artery stenosis. This finding itself warrants further investigation, even if your ABI values appear normal.
Mistake 3: Assuming Normal ABI Means No PAD
While a normal resting ABI is reassuring, some people with mild PAD have normal values at rest but abnormal values after exercise. If you have symptoms of PAD but a normal resting ABI, your doctor may recommend an exercise ABI test.
Mistake 4: Overlooking High ABI Values
Many people focus only on low ABI values, but values above 1.4 are also significant and require medical attention. High values indicate arterial stiffness and are associated with increased cardiovascular risk.
Mistake 5: Self-Diagnosing Based on ABI Alone
While ABI is highly accurate, it’s just one piece of the diagnostic puzzle. Your doctor will consider your ABI results alongside your symptoms, medical history, physical examination findings, and possibly other tests before making a diagnosis.