Overview

What is peripheral arterial disease of the legs?
Peripheral arterial disease (PAD) is narrowing or blockage of arteries
that results in poor blood flow to your arms and legs. When you walk or
exercise, your leg muscles do not get enough blood and you can get painful
cramps.
Peripheral arterial disease is also called peripheral
vascular disease. This topic focuses on peripheral arterial disease of the
legs, the area where it is most common.
See a picture of
peripheral
arterial disease of the legs
.
What causes
PAD?
The most common cause is the buildup of
plaque on the inside of arteries. Plaque is made of
extra
cholesterol, calcium, and other material in your
blood. Over time, plaque builds up along the inner walls of the arteries,
including those that supply blood to your legs.
If plaque builds
up in your arteries, there is less room for blood to flow. Every part of your
body needs blood that is rich in oxygen. But plaque buildup prevents that blood
from flowing freely and starves the muscles and other tissues in the lower
body. See a picture of
peripheral
arterial disease of the legs
.
This process of plaque
buildup usually happens at the same time throughout the body. It is called
atherosclerosis or hardening of the arteries. If you
have this problem in your legs, you most likely will have it in the arteries
that supply blood to your heart and brain. This increases your chance of having
a
heart attack or
stroke.
Plaque builds up bit by bit over
a lifetime, but symptoms often do not start until after age 65.
High cholesterol,
high blood pressure, and smoking make you more likely
to get atherosclerosis and peripheral arterial disease.
What are the symptoms?
Many people who have PAD
do not have any symptoms.
But if you do have symptoms, you may
have a tight, aching, or squeezing pain in the calf, thigh, or buttock. This
pain, called
intermittent claudication, usually happens after you
have walked a certain distance. For example, your pain may always start after
you have walked a block or two or after a few minutes. The pain goes away if
you stop walking. As PAD gets worse, you may have pain in your foot or toe when
you are not walking.
How is PAD
diagnosed?
Your doctor will talk with you about your
symptoms and past health and will do a physical exam. During the exam, your
doctor will check your pulse at your groin, behind your knee, on the inner
ankle, and on the top of your foot. Your pulse shows the strength of blood
flow. An absent or weak pulse in these spots is a sign of PAD. Your doctor may
also look at the color of your foot when it is higher than the level of your
heart and after exercise. The color of your foot can be a clue to whether
enough blood is getting through your arteries.
You will likely
have a test that compares the blood pressure in your legs with the blood
pressure in your arms. This test is called an ankle-brachial index. A test
called an arterial
Doppler ultrasound may be done to check the blood flow
in your arteries.
Blood tests to check your
cholesterol and blood sugar can tell whether you may
have other problems related to PAD, such as high cholesterol and
diabetes.
How is it treated?
One of the most important things you can do for PAD is to quit smoking. If you
need help quitting, talk to your doctor about programs and medicines that can
help you stop. These can increase your chances of quitting forever.
There are also products that gradually wean you off nicotine. These
include nicotine patches, chewing gums, nasal sprays, inhalers, and lozenges.
These treatments help people have better success in the long term.1
Your doctor may
tell you to eat healthy foods and to get more exercise. You may need to take
aspirin and medicines to lower your cholesterol and control your symptoms. If
you have diabetes, you will need to carefully control your blood sugar.
Combined, these measures can help control your symptoms and reverse the
blockage of your arteries. Keeping your arteries open can help lower your risk
of heart attack and stroke. And it may also improve the quality and length of
your life.
If your leg pain does not get better after a few months
of treatment, your doctor may prescribe a medicine called cilostazol (Pletal)
to help with the pain when you walk.
If you still do not get better, you may need a procedure
called
angioplasty or bypass surgery to open narrowed
arteries or reroute blood flow around them. These treatments are usually used
for severe peripheral arterial disease.
In rare cases, advanced
PAD can cause tissues in the leg or foot to die because they do not get enough
oxygen as a result of poor blood flow. If this happens, part of the leg or foot
must be removed (amputated). This is more common in people who also have
diabetes.