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How Do You Know If You Have PAD?
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What is Peripheral Arterial Disease?
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, Ron Gorke , Alan Hirsch MD, Diane Treat-Jaco PhD, RN
There's a good chance you've never heard of peripheral arterial disease, or PAD. But this blockage of the leg arteries affects an estimated 8-12 million people in the U.S. alone. The condition can lead to painful leg symptoms, but most people experience no symptoms at all, and the disease is dangerously underdiagnosed. Why aren't more doctors diagnosing PAD? Who's most at risk? And how is PAD connected to stroke and heart attack? Tune in to learn the answers to these questions and more.
ANNOUNCER: If you are over the age of 50 and have been experiencing severe leg pain while walking or performing daily activities, you may be suffering from a common condition called Peripheral Arterial Disease, or PAD.
DIANE TREAT-JACOBSON, PhD, RN: PAD
is a narrowing of the arteries that supply the legs with blood. The
arteries can fill up with plaque or calcium and other kinds of things that
will narrow the arteries in the legs. ANNOUNCER:
This narrowing of the arteries in the legs leads to inadequate blood
flow. ALAN HIRSCH, MD: Most individuals have heard of the word
"hardening of the arteries." The medical term is
atherosclerosis. That is derived from the word "athero," which
means the gruel or the blockage in the lining of the blood vessel, and
sclerosis, which is the deposition of calcium and the hardening of the
vessel, and these two processes together can severely narrow and block the
artery. Peripheral arterial disease is caused by the same risk factors
that cause blockages in other arteries of the body, such as in the heart
and brain. These risk factors include smoking, diabetes, high
blood pressure and high blood cholesterol. This atherosclerotic
blockage, by itself, is usually considered to be irreversible, but the
rate at which it develops can be markedly blocked by a good, healthy
lifestyle and by the use of medications that lower the importance of these
risk factors.
ANNOUNCER: But to lower the risk factors of
PAD, people must be properly informed about the disease
itself. 8-12 million Americans are living with this condition, and up
to 8.6 million of these people are without symptoms. Even those who are
symptomatic often mistake the symptoms for something
else. RON GORKE: I’d walk maybe 100 yards and
I’d start to get a pain in my buttocks. A kind of a numbness and
then it would run down my leg into my calf and I’d have to stop
for maybe five minutes and then I could go again. I thought I had a bad
hip so I didn’t pay too much attention to it. This went on for
about a year and then I decided I better go and get it checked
out. ALAN HIRSCH, MD: I consider peripheral arterial
disease to have been a silent epidemic, and silent because of a
combination of factors that need to be recognized. It's
been silent inasmuch as many patients themselves don't recognize
the symptom as being one of a disease that can be altered with medical
therapy. DIANE TREAT-JACOBSON, PhD, RN: Leg pain when you walk
is not a normal sign of aging and should be investigated. It can be a sign
of a dangerous disease that could lead to a heart attack, a stoke or
severe disability.
ALAN HIRSCH, MD: Like other
illnesses that block the arteries in the body, peripheral arterial disease
is develops slowly over three, five, ten or 20 years. Initially
there may be no symptoms whatsoever from the blockage to the leg arteries,
although with time, the patient may develop a symptom called
claudication. Claudication is a discomfort that is sometimes
described as a fatigue, a numbness, a cramping, or may actually be a
severe pain that occurs in these muscles with walking and that is relieved
when the patient stops to rest. Unfortunately, when the patient
begins to walk again, claudication reappears and limits the
patient's ability to perform their activities of daily
living.