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Review
. 2013 Apr;15(4):347.
doi: 10.1007/s11886-013-0347-5.

Functional impairment in peripheral artery disease and how to improve it in 2013

Affiliations
Review

Functional impairment in peripheral artery disease and how to improve it in 2013

Mary McGrae McDermott. Curr Cardiol Rep. 2013 Apr.

Abstract

Lower extremity peripheral artery disease (PAD) affects 8 million men and women in the United States and will be increasingly common as the U.S. population lives longer with chronic disease. People with PAD have poorer walking endurance, slower walking velocity, and poorer balance, compared with individuals without PAD. People with PAD may reduce their walking activity to avoid leg symptoms. Thus, clinicians should not equate stabilization or improvement in exertional leg symptoms with stabilization or improvement in walking performance in PAD. In addition, even asymptomatic PAD patients have greater functional impairment and faster functional decline than individuals without PAD. Of the 2 FDA-approved medications for treating claudication symptoms, pentoxifylline may not be more efficacious than placebo, whereas cilostazol confers a modest improvement in treadmill walking performance. Supervised treadmill walking exercise is associated with substantial improvement in walking endurance, but many PAD patients do not have access to supervised exercise programs. Unsupervised walking exercise programs may be beneficial in PAD, but data are mixed.

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Figures

Figure 1
Figure 1
Association of the ankle brachial index with the ability to walk for six minutes continuously without rest. From McDermott MM, Greenland P, Liu K, Guralnik JM, Celic L, Criqui MH, Chan C, Martin GJ, Schneider J, Pearce WH, Taylor LM, Clark E. The ankle brachial index as a measure of leg functioning and physical activity in peripheral arterial disease: the walking and leg circulation study. (With permission from: McDermott MM, Greenland P, Liu K, Guralnik JM, Celic L, Criqui MH, Chan C, Martin GJ, Schneider J, Pearce WH, Taylor LM, Clark E. The ankle brachial index as a measure of leg functioning and physical activity in peripheral arterial disease: the walking and leg circulation study. Ann Intern Med 2002;136:873-883) [9].

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