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Peripheral Arterial Disease
Don't Suffer in Silence
Has this happened to you?
A distinct pain or cramp
strikes your legs when you
walk. When you stop for a few
minutes, the pain goes away. But
when you start walking again, it
comes back.
You might chalk it up to getting
older and respond by cutting back
on walking. But that would be the
wrong reaction. Instead, you should
see your doctor because your pain
may be claudication, which is often
a symptom of peripheral arterial
disease (PAD). It's a potentially
serious but treatable circulation
problem.
When someone develops PAD, the
extremities – usually a person's legs
– don't get enough blood flow to
keep up with demand from the
muscles. The result can be pain
that develops when the demand
increases, such as when walking or
exercising. The arteries that supply
blood to the limbs are damaged,
usually by a buildup of plaque that
blocks or narrows them.
Treatment Restores
Blood Flow
Treating peripheral arterial disease
with angioplasty and stenting, or
atherectomy, is often effective for
patients who have moderate to
severe narrowing or blockage in one
or more blood vessels.
Angioplasty involves inserting a
catheter (a small, hollow tube) with
a tiny balloon on its tip into an
artery. Using a type of X-ray that
projects moving pictures on a screen, the catheter is guided through the
blood vessel to the area that's
narrowed or blocked.
When the catheter is in place, the
balloon is inflated to flatten the
blockage into the blood vessel wall,
while at the same time stretching the
artery open to increase blood flow.
Following angioplasty, there's a risk
that the artery will become narrowed
or blocked again at the same site. To
help prevent this, a stent is usually
put in place after the balloon is
deflated and withdrawn.
The stent is a tiny mesh tube that
remains in the artery to prop it open.
The artery wall grows over the stent
to keep it in place. Atherectomy is a
new procedure that is very effective
to restore blood flow. A catheter is
advanced to actually remove the
blockage from the body.
Treating Pain and
Reducing Risk
Treatment of PAD is to reduce
symptoms, such as leg pain, so that
physical activities can be resumed
and to stop the progression of
atherosclerosis (buildup of plaque in
arteries) to reduce the risk of heart
attack and stroke.
PAD patients should control their
cholesterol, blood pressure and blood
sugar, if they also have diabetes.
Lifestyle changes are important, too.
If you smoke, quitting is the single
most effective way to reduce risk.
Exercise helps condition muscles to
use oxygen more efficiently, and a
healthy diet can help to control other
risk factors, such as cholesterol and
blood pressure levels.
For more information on this procedure,
please call the San Jacinto
Methodist Hospital Cardiovascular
Center at 281-420-8587.
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