Lifestyle changes key to treating PAD


DUBLIN, Ireland, Oct 23, 2009 (UPI via COMTEX) -- Irish and British researchers
say risk-reducing lifestyle changes are still key to treating peripheral
arterial disease.

PAD occurs when plaque accumulates in arteries that supply blood to areas of the
body other than the heart and brain.

The study, published in the Journal of Vascular and Intervention Radiology,
found there is, as yet, not enough evidence to advocate minimally invasive
surgery to open a narrowed or blocked leg artery in a person who does not have
leg symptoms.

In the retrospective study conducted in Dublin, Ireland, 918 people had X-ray
exams to check for arterial blockage in the leg. The 122 patients found with
arterial narrowing of 50 percent or blockage, but no leg pain were followed for
as long as nine years. One-third of the 122 developed symptoms of pain or
ulceration and 13.9 percent required treatment.

Dr. Aoife Keeling of Beaumont Hospital in Dublin and an interventional
radiologist at Northwestern Hospital in Chicago suggests the majority of PAD
patients may have remained asymptomatic due to intense risk factor modification
they underwent or other factors as yet unidentified.

"Prevention of PAD progression is vital and can be achieved with risk factor
modification, for example, if individuals stop smoking, watch their diets, lower
their cholesterol and have their blood pressure monitored," Keeling said in a
statement.



URL: www.upi.com


Copyright 2009 by United Press International

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