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Peripheral artery disease affects the legs of claudicating patients in a diffuse manner irrespective of the level of the arterial tree primarily involved

Authors :
Todd J. Leutzinger
Panagiotis Koutakis
Matthew A. Fuglestad
Hafizur Rahman
Holly Despiegelaere
Mahdi Hassan
Molly Schieber
Jason M. Johanning
Nick Stergiou
G. Matthew Longo
George P. Casale
Sara A. Myers
Iraklis I. Pipinos
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, 2022.

Abstract

ObjectiveDifferent levels of arterial occlusive disease (aortoiliac, femoropopliteal, multi-level disease) can produce claudication symptoms in different leg muscle groups (buttocks, thighs, calves) in patients with peripheral artery disease (PAD). We tested the hypothesis that different levels of occlusive disease uniquely affect the muscles of PAD legs and produce distinctive patterns in the way claudicating patients walk.Methods97 PAD patients and 35 healthy controls were recruited. PAD patients were categorized to aortoiliac, femoropopliteal and multi-level disease groups using computerized tomographic angiography. Subjects performed walking trials both pain-free and during claudication and joint kinematics, kinetics, and spatiotemporal parameters were calculated to evaluate the net contribution of the calf, thigh and buttock muscles.ResultsPAD patients with different levels of arterial occlusions had different patterns of symptoms in their calves, thighs and buttocks. However, no significant biomechanical differences were found between PAD groups during the pain-free conditions with minimal differences between PAD groups in the claudicating state. All statistical differences in the pain-free condition occurred between healthy controls and one or more PAD groups. A discriminant analysis function was able to adequately predict if a subject was a control with over 70% accuracy, but the function was unable to differentiate between PAD groups.ConclusionsIn-depth gait analyses of claudicating PAD patients indicate that different levels of arterial disease produce symptoms that affect different muscle groups across the lower extremity but impact the function of the leg muscles in a diffuse manner generating similar walking impairments.

Subjects

Subjects :
body regions

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........0c3dc519f4625c6502b2e89ca73bd7d6
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1101/2022.02.14.22270963