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PERIPHERAL ARTERIAL DISEASE (PAD)

PERIPHERAL ARTERIAL DISEASE (PAD)

Patient Information Leaflet

What is Peripheral Arterial Disease?

Peripheral arterial disease (PAD) is a condition where the arteries that supply blood to your legs become narrowed or blocked. This happens because fatty deposits (plaque) build up inside the blood vessels, reducing blood flow to the muscles and skin. 

When blood flow is reduced:

  • Muscles do not receive enough oxygen
  • Walking becomes painful
  • Wounds heal slowly
  • Tissue damage may occur

Common Symptoms

You may experience:

  • Pain in the calf when walking (claudication)
  • Pain in thigh or buttock when walking
  • Pain relieved by rest
  • Cold feet
  • Numbness or tingling
  • Slow-healing wounds
  • Black toes or gangrene
  • Rest pain (severe disease)
  • Weak pulses in the foot

The pain usually gets worse with walking and improves with rest. 

Risk Factors

You are more likely to develop PAD if you have:

  • Smoking
  • Diabetes
  • High blood pressure
  • High cholesterol
  • Kidney disease
  • Previous stroke or heart disease
  • Age > 50 years
  • Obesity
  • Lack of exercise

Smoking is the biggest risk factor.

Why PAD is Important

PAD does not only affect the legs. It also increases the risk of:

  • Heart attack
  • Stroke
  • Amputation
  • Poor wound healing
  • Limb loss

Tests You May Need

Your vascular specialist may request:

Blood Flow Tests

  • Ankle Brachial Index (ABI)
  • Segmental pressures
  • Toe pressures

Imaging Tests

  • Ultrasound Doppler
  • CT Angiogram
  • MR Angiogram
  • Formal angiogram

These tests help determine:

  • Where the blockage is
  • How severe it is
  • Best treatment option

Treatment Options

Treatment depends on severity.

Medical Treatment

This is recommended for all patients.

Lifestyle Changes

  • Stop smoking
  • Walk daily
  • Control diabetes
  • Control blood pressure
  • Control cholesterol
  • Weight loss

Walking improves circulation and symptoms.

Medications

You may be prescribed:

  • Aspirin or Clopidogrel (blood thinners)
  • Statins (cholesterol medication)
  • Cilostazol (improves walking distance)
  • Blood pressure medication
  • Diabetes medication

These reduce risk of heart attack and stroke. 

Angioplasty (Keyhole Procedure)

This is a minimally invasive procedure used to open blocked arteries.

During angioplasty:

  • A small tube is inserted into artery (usually groin)
  • A balloon is inflated to open the blockage
  • A stent may be placed to keep artery open
  • Blood flow improves

Benefits:

  • Small incision
  • Faster recovery
  • Often same-day discharge

Risks:

  • Bleeding
  • Artery injury
  • Re-blockage
  • Kidney injury from dye
  • Allergic reaction
  • Blood clot formation 

Bypass Surgery

This is open surgery used for long or severe blockages.

During bypass surgery:

  • A vein or artificial graft is used
  • Blood is rerouted around blocked artery
  • Flow to foot improves

This surgery improves:

  • Wound healing
  • Pain
  • Limb salvage

Risks include:

  • Bleeding
  • Infection
  • Heart attack
  • Stroke
  • Graft blockage
  • Poor wound healing 

Amputation (When Necessary)

Amputation may be required when:

  • Severe infection
  • Gangrene
  • Non-healing wounds
  • No blood flow
  • Failed revascularization
  • Life-threatening sepsis

The goal is to:

  • Remove diseased tissue
  • Relieve pain
  • Allow healing
  • Preserve life

Risks include:

  • Infection
  • Poor healing
  • Phantom pain
  • Need for further amputation 

When to Seek Urgent Help

Contact your doctor urgently if you develop:

  • Sudden severe leg pain
  • Cold pale foot
  • Black toes
  • Spreading infection
  • Fever with foot wound
  • Severe rest pain
  • Loss of sensation
  • Foot turning blue

These may indicate limb-threatening ischemia.

How You Can Help Yourself

You can improve circulation by:

✓ Stop smoking
✓ Walk daily
✓ Take medications
✓ Control diabetes
✓ Check feet daily
✓ Wear comfortable shoes
✓ Avoid foot injuries
✓ Keep feet warm
✓ Attend follow-ups

Foot Care Advice

Important for diabetic and PAD patients:

  • Inspect feet daily
  • Do not walk barefoot
  • Cut nails carefully
  • Moisturize dry skin
  • Avoid hot water bottles
  • Report wounds early
  • Wear protective footwear

Follow-Up

Regular follow-up is important to:

  • Monitor circulation
  • Check wounds
  • Adjust medication
  • Detect re-blockage early
  • Prevent amputation

Summary

Peripheral arterial disease reduces blood flow to the legs.
Treatment aims to:

  • Reduce symptoms
  • Improve walking
  • Heal wounds
  • Prevent amputation
  • Reduce stroke and heart attack risk

Treatment may include:

  • Medication
  • Exercise
  • Angioplasty
  • Surgery
  • Amputation (when necessary)
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Dr Kgopane T.T

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