Peripheral arterial disease (patient information): Difference between revisions

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The narrowing of the blood vessels leads to decreased blood flow, which can injure nerves and other tissues.
The narrowing of the blood vessels leads to decreased blood flow, which can injure nerves and other tissues.
==What are the symptoms of Peripheral arterial disease?==
The classic symptoms are pain, achiness, fatigue, burning, or discomfort in the muscles of your feet, calves, or thighs. These symptoms usually appear during walking or exercise and go away after several minutes of rest.
* At first, these symptoms may appear only when you walk uphill, walk faster, or walk for longer distances.
* Slowly, these symptoms come on more quickly and with less exercise.
* Your legs or feet may feel numb when you are at rest. The legs also may feel cool to the touch, and the skin may look pale.
When peripheral artery disease becomes severe, you may have:
* [[Impotence]]
* Pain and cramps at night
* Pain or tingling in the feet or toes, which can be so severe that even the weight of clothes or bed sheets is painful
* Pain that is worse when you raise the leg and improves when you dangle your legs over the side of the bed
* Skin that looks dark and blue
* Sores that do not heal

Revision as of 17:07, 30 September 2012

Peripheral arterial disease

Overview

What are the symptoms?

What are the causes?

Who is at highest risk?

Diagnosis

When to seek urgent medical care?

Treatment options

Where to find medical care for Peripheral arterial disease?

Prevention

What to expect (Outlook/Prognosis)?

Possible complications

Peripheral arterial disease On the Web

Ongoing Trials at Clinical Trials.gov

Images of Peripheral arterial disease

Videos on Peripheral arterial disease

FDA on Peripheral arterial disease

CDC on Peripheral arterial disease

Peripheral arterial disease in the news

Blogs on Peripheral arterial disease

Directions to Hospitals Treating Peripheral arterial disease

Risk calculators and risk factors for Peripheral arterial disease

For the WikiDoc page for this topic, click here

Editor-In-Chief: C. Michael Gibson, M.S., M.D. [1] Associate Editor(s)-in-Chief: Raviteja Guddeti, M.B.B.S. [2]

Overview

Peripheral artery disease is a condition of the blood vessels that leads to narrowing and hardening of the arteries that supply the legs and feet.

The narrowing of the blood vessels leads to decreased blood flow, which can injure nerves and other tissues.

What are the symptoms of Peripheral arterial disease?

The classic symptoms are pain, achiness, fatigue, burning, or discomfort in the muscles of your feet, calves, or thighs. These symptoms usually appear during walking or exercise and go away after several minutes of rest.

  • At first, these symptoms may appear only when you walk uphill, walk faster, or walk for longer distances.
  • Slowly, these symptoms come on more quickly and with less exercise.
  • Your legs or feet may feel numb when you are at rest. The legs also may feel cool to the touch, and the skin may look pale.

When peripheral artery disease becomes severe, you may have:

  • Impotence
  • Pain and cramps at night
  • Pain or tingling in the feet or toes, which can be so severe that even the weight of clothes or bed sheets is painful
  • Pain that is worse when you raise the leg and improves when you dangle your legs over the side of the bed
  • Skin that looks dark and blue
  • Sores that do not heal