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Peripheral Arterial Disease

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PAD

NIH - What Is Peripheral Arterial Disease? “Peripheral arterial disease (PAD) occurs when a fatty material called plaque (plak) builds up on the inside walls of the arteries that carry blood from the heart to the head, internal organs, and limbs. PAD is also known as atherosclerotic peripheral arterial disease. The buildup of plaque on the artery walls is called atherosclerosis (ath-er-o-skler-O-sis), or hardening of the arteries. Atherosclerosis causes the arteries to narrow or become blocked, which can reduce or block blood flow. PAD most commonly affects blood flow to the legs. Blocked blood flow can cause pain and numbness. It also can increase a person's chance of getting an infection, and it can make it difficult for the person's body to fight the infection. If severe enough, blocked blood flow can cause tissue death (gangrene). PAD is the leading cause of leg amputation. … A person with PAD has a six to seven times greater risk of CAD, heart attack, stroke, or transient ischemic attack ("mini stroke") than the rest of the population. If a person has heart disease, he or she has a 1 in 3 chance of having blocked arteries in the legs. Early diagnosis and treatment of PAD, including screening high-risk individuals, are important to prevent disability and save lives. PAD treatment may stop the disease from progressing and reduce the risk of heart attack, heart disease, and stroke. Although PAD is serious, it is treatable. The buildup of plaque in the arteries can often be stopped or reversed with dietary changes, exercise, and efforts to lower high cholesterol levels and high blood pressure. In some patients, blood flow in the vessels may be improved by medicines or surgery. “

Highlighted Articles

Association between ankle - brachial index and risk factor profile in patients newly diagnosed with intermittent claudication. (Circ J. 2008) “Peripheral arterial disease (PAD) affects up to 20% of adults older than 55 years and is associated with silent or symptomatic arterial disease in other vascular beds.1–3 Although the majority of PAD patients are asymptomatic with a low rate of local symptoms and complications, both symptomatic and asymptomatic PAD patients carry a higher risk for vascular events. PAD is considered as a coronary heart disease (CHD) equivalent and is characterized by high mortality rates (approximately 25–30% within 5 years for patients with symptomatic PAD), mainly from stroke and myocardial infarction.”

Peripheral Arterial Disease -- A Cardiovascular Time Bomb (Br J Diabetes Vasc Dis. 2007) “People with PAD are six times more likely to die from cardiovascular disease within 10 years than people without PAD. Evidence suggests that aggressive risk factor management will prevent many premature deaths and associated morbidity. Therefore, it is vital to identify patients and initiate effective management strategies swiftly. However, whilst 40% of PAD patients have symptomatic disease ranging from intermittent claudication to critical limb ischaemia, around 60% are asymptomatic. As a result of the low rates of detection PAD is underdiagnosed and undertreated in the UK.”

Internet Site

NIH - Peripheral Arterial Disease

Visit InfoMedSearch's Home Page for all InfoMedLinks Cardiovascular Topics: Atherosclerosis, Atrial Fibrillation, Coronary Artery Disease, Cholesterol - Lipids, General Cardiovascular, Heart Failure, Hypertension, Myocardial Infarction (Heart Attack), Peripheral Artery Disease, and Stroke.

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Notes

View Treatment Guidelines from previous years. Go to Treatment for each year.

Peripheral Arterial Disease

Daily Treatment Report

Cognitive Therapy-CBT-Psychotherapy

Device Therapy

Drug Side-Effects and Interactions

Drugs

Exercise

Effects of low-intensity exercise on patients with peripheral artery disease. (Phys Sportsmed. 2009)

Maximal strength training improves walking performance in peripheral arterial disease patients. (Scand J Med Sci Sports. 2009) “These results suggest that application of MST could accompany aerobic endurance training as a part of the treatment of PAD patients with mild to moderate-severe claudication.”

Physical Activity During Daily Life and Functional Decline in Peripheral Arterial Disease (Circulation. 2009) "Conclusions- Higher physical activity levels during daily life are associated with less functional decline among people with peripheral arterial disease. These findings may be particularly important for the large number of peripheral arterial disease persons without access to supervised walking exercise programs."

Treadmill Exercise and Resistance Training in Patients With Peripheral Arterial Disease With and Without Intermittent Claudication (JAMA. 2009) "Conclusions Supervised treadmill training improved 6-minute walk performance, treadmill walking performance, brachial artery flow-mediated dilation, and quality of life but did not improve the short physical performance battery scores of PAD participants with and without intermittent claudication. Lower extremity resistance training improved functional performance measured by treadmill walking, quality of life, and stair climbing ability."

General Information

The prognostic impact of general and abdominal obesity in peripheral arterial disease. (Int J Obes (Lond). 2009)

Treatment of hypertension in peripheral arterial disease. ( Cochrane Database Syst Rev. 2009)

The burden of peripheral artery disease and the role of antiplatelet therapy. (Postgrad Med. 2009)

Patterns of treatment for peripheral arterial disease in the United States: 1996-2005. (J Vasc Surg. 2009)

Guidelines

Immunotherapy

 

Internet Sites

Treatment Information

DrugBank (drug structure)

FDA - MedWatch (Drug Alerts)

Drug-Food-Supplement Information

Drug Information Online

Drug Interaction Checker

DrugDigest (drug interactions)

FDA - Drug Interactions: What You Should Know

NIH - Botanical Dietary Supplements: Background Information

NIH - Drug, Supplements, and Herbal Information

NIH - Herbal Supplements: Consider Safety, Too

NIH - Medicines

NIH - Vitamin and Mineral Supplement Fact Sheets

Nutrition

Other

Other Treatments

Experimental

Radiotherapy

 

Supplements-Vitamins-CAM

Randomized clinical trial of folate supplementation in patients with peripheral arterial disease. (Br J Surg. 2009)

Surgery

Transplantation

 

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