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Women & Vascular Disease
Treatment
About Peripheral Arterial Disease (PAD)
PAD is a common circulation problem in which the arteries that carry blood to the legs or arms become narrowed or clogged. This interferes with the normal flow of blood, sometimes causing pain, but often causing no symptoms at all. The most common cause of PAD is atherosclerosis, often called "hardening of the arteries." Atherosclerosis is a gradual process in which cholesterol and scar tissue build up, forming a substance called "plaque" that clogs the blood vessels. In some cases, PAD may be caused by blood clots that lodge in the arteries and restrict blood flow. Left untreated, this insufficient blood flow will lead to limb amputation in some patients.
Catching the Asymptomatic Warning Sign Early
When Treatment is Most Effective
Identifying PAD while asymptomatic may be
life-saving for women. Treatment may
greatly influence the woman's outcome.
These treatments may include further investigation into the state of
disease in the coronaries, which could lead to heart disease, and carotids,
which could lead to stroke, as well as the legs, and treating the significant
areas of blockage that are found. Treatment with lifestyle modification and
medication may slow the natural advancement of the disease. Early detection of PAD is important because
these women are at significantly increased risk, and preventive measures can be
taken.
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Women
with PAD have four times the risk of heart attack and stroke
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A person with an ABI of
0.3 (high risk) has a 2 to 3 fold increased risk of 5-year cardiovascular death
compared to a patient with an ABI of 0.95 (normal or low risk)
In atherosclerosis, the blood flow channel narrows from the buildup of plaque, preventing blood from passing through as needed, restricting oxygen and other nutrients from getting to normal tissue. The arteries also become rigid and less elastic, and are less able to react to tissue demands for changes in blood flow. Many of the risk factors-high cholesterol, high blood pressure, smoking and diabetes-may also damage the blood vessel wall, making the blood vessel prone to diffuse plaque deposits.
Angioplasty and
Stenting
Interventional radiologists pioneered
angioplasty and stenting, which was first performed to treat peripheral
arterial disease. Using imaging for
guidance, the interventional radiologist threads a catheter through the femoral
artery in the groin to the blocked artery in the legs. Then he or she inflates a balloon to open the
blood vessel where it is narrowed or blocked.
In some cases this is then held open with a stent, a tiny metal
cylinder. This is a minimally invasive
treatment that does not require surgery, just a nick in the skin the size of a
pencil tip.
How we
diagnose
Risk for Heart Attack, Stroke and Death
Ankle-Brachial Index
(ABI): is a comparative
blood pressure reading in the arm and ankle.
This is used to screen for peripheral arterial disease. It is a direct measure of fatty plaque buildup
in leg arteries and an indirect gauge of plaque accumulations throughout the
entire cardiovascular system. Because
atherosclerosis is a systemic disease, women developing plaque in their legs
are likely to have plaque building up in the carotid arteries, which can lead
to stroke, or the coronary arteries, which can lead to heart attack.
Ultrasound: a technique called doppler ultrasound that
creates pictures using sound waves can determine whether there is blockage or
disease in the arteries that carry blood throughout the body. Some physicians recommend ultrasound
screening for those who have been diagnosed with atherosclerosis, high blood
pressure or other risk factors.
Prevalence
Symptoms
Heart disease is the #1 killer of women in
the United States. Peripheral arterial
disease (PAD)-clogged or narrowed arteries in the legs-is a red flag that the
same process may be going on elsewhere because PAD is associated with other
life-threatening vascular diseases. Through
early detection, interventional radiologists can save women from future stroke,
heart attack, and early death. To combat
this major public health issue, the Society of Interventional Radiology
recommends greater screening efforts by the medical community through the use
of the ankle brachial index (ABI) test.
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The
most common symptom of PAD is called claudication, which is leg pain that occurs when walking or exercising and disappears when the person stops the
activity.
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Other symptoms of PAD
include: numbness and tingling in the lower legs and feet, coldness in the
lower legs and feet, and ulcers or sores on the legs or feet that don't heal.
Many
people simply live with their pain, assuming it is a normal part of aging,
rather than reporting it to their doctor.
Risk Factors
Like heart disease, peripheral arterial disease is under-recognized in women. According to a survey of primary care physicians conducted in 2002, nearly all recognized that older people are more susceptible to PAD, and identified men as being susceptible to PAD. However, they mostly excluded women as likely to have PAD, which is incorrect. The prevalence is actually equal on the diagnostic ABI test. As vascular experts, interventional radiologists are partnering with primary care physicians to increase early screening.
Twelve to 20 percent of Americans older than 65 suffer from peripheral arterial disease but only one-third are symptomatic. Symptoms can include pain when walking that subsides at rest, leg cramps, pain at rest, numbness and skin discoloration, sores or other symptoms of skin breakdown. Women may be more likely than men to have PAD without experiencing symptoms; 50 to 90 percent are asymptomatic or have unrecognized symptoms of the disease, which could put them at greater risk of developing serious disease before it is diagnosed and treated. Specifically, women are also less likely to have intermittent claudication symptoms, i.e., pain when walking that subsides at rest.
Get tested for PAD
if you:
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