PERIPHERAL ARTERIAL DISEASE
Symptoms of PAD include:
- Heaviness, cramping, pain or fatigue in the leg or hip muscles on exertion. Typically, this pain goes away with rest and returns with activity.
- Lack of growth of your toenails and leg hair
- One foot feeling colder than the other
- Pale, discolored, or blue leg or foot
- Leg weakness or numbness
- Pain or a feeling of pins and needles in your extremity
- Pain at rest in your leg and foot
- Sores or wounds on your extremities that heal slowly or not at all. The sores may become infected.
Risk Factors for Peripheral Arterial Disease Include:
- Diabetes
- Family history
- High Blood Pressure / Hypertension
- Smoking
- Obesity / Unhealthy Diet
- High Cholesterol
- Kidney Disease
- Lack of exercise
- Stress
An Ankle Brachial Index (ABI) is a simple test that a doctor can perform in the office to help determine if you have PAD. The test compares the blood pressure in your ankle to that in your arm, if the pressure is lower in your ankle than your arm, there is a chance you have PAD.
This test uses ultrasound to look at the blood flow in the large arteries and veins in the arms or legs. During the ultrasound, the technician places a handheld instrument called a transducer on your skin, transmitting sound waves that produce images of the blood vessels on a monitor. This test is done as the first step to look at arteries and veins. Sometimes, arteriography and venography may be needed later. The test is done to diagnose:
- Arteriosclerosis of the arms or legs
- Blood clot (deep vein thrombosis)
- Venous insufficiency
- Injury to the arteries
- Monitor arterial reconstruction and bypass grafts
In an angiogram, X-rays are used to determine whether plaque has blocked the blood vessels. During this test, which requires local anesthesia, a doctor makes a small incision in the skin near the groin, inserts a thin tube called a catheter, and guides it into an artery. The doctor moves the catheter to the area to be examined and injects a dye that highlights any narrow, enlarged, or blocked blood vessels.
Angioplasty involves passing a catheter with a balloon through a blocked artery. Once inflated, the balloon compresses the plaque against the wall of the artery. During angioplasty, a tiny metal mesh tube called a stent may be placed in the artery to help hold it open.
Atherectomy uses a special catheter to gently shave and remove plaque from the arteries.