Claudication – Causes, Symptoms and Treatment
Claudication refers to exercise-induced pain or cramping in the legs caused by reduced blood flow. It is a hallmark symptom of peripheral arterial disease (PAD).
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Claudication refers to exercise-induced pain or cramping in the legs caused by reduced blood flow. It is a hallmark symptom of peripheral arterial disease (PAD).
What is Claudication?
Claudication (from the Latin word for "limping") is a medical term describing exercise-induced pain, cramping, or heaviness in the legs due to insufficient blood supply to the muscles during physical activity. The most common form is intermittent claudication, a key symptom of peripheral arterial disease (PAD). Patients typically have to stop walking after a certain distance to relieve the pain, then resume walking once the discomfort subsides.
Causes
The primary cause of claudication is peripheral arterial disease (PAD), in which arteries are narrowed or blocked by fatty deposits (atherosclerosis). Key risk factors include:
- Smoking (the single greatest risk factor)
- Diabetes mellitus
- High blood pressure (hypertension)
- Elevated blood lipid levels (hyperlipidemia)
- Obesity and physical inactivity
- Older age and male sex
Less common causes include inflammatory vascular diseases, blood clots (thrombosis), or neurological conditions such as spinal canal stenosis, which can cause neurogenic claudication.
Symptoms
The hallmark symptom of intermittent claudication is recurring pain or cramping in the calf, thigh, or buttock muscles that is triggered by walking and relieved by rest. Typical features include:
- Pain appearing after a predictable walking distance (the "pain-free walking distance")
- Relief of symptoms after a short rest
- Tingling, numbness, or coldness in the legs or feet
- Pale or bluish skin discoloration
- In advanced stages: rest pain and poorly healing wounds or ulcers
Diagnosis
Diagnosis is established through clinical examination and diagnostic tests:
- Ankle-Brachial Index (ABI): The ratio of blood pressure at the ankle to blood pressure at the arm; a value below 0.9 is considered abnormal.
- Duplex ultrasound: Imaging of blood flow and arterial narrowing using ultrasound technology.
- Angiography (MRI or CT): Detailed imaging of the blood vessels to locate and assess narrowings or blockages.
- Treadmill or walking test to measure pain-free and maximum walking distance.
Treatment
Conservative Management
Supervised exercise training -- particularly walking programs -- is the most effective conservative treatment and can significantly increase pain-free walking distance. Risk factor management is equally important:
- Smoking cessation (essential)
- Optimal control of diabetes and blood pressure
- Lipid-lowering therapy (e.g., statins)
- Antiplatelet medications (e.g., aspirin or clopidogrel)
Interventional and Surgical Treatment
For severe symptoms or critical limb ischemia, interventional or surgical procedures may be necessary:
- Percutaneous transluminal angioplasty (PTA): Widening of the narrowed artery using a balloon catheter, often combined with stent placement.
- Bypass surgery: Rerouting blood flow around blocked arterial segments using a graft vessel.
- Endarterectomy: Surgical removal of atherosclerotic plaque from the artery wall.
References
- Norgren L. et al. - Inter-Society Consensus for the Management of Peripheral Arterial Disease (TASC II). Journal of Vascular Surgery, 2007.
- Aboyans V. et al. - 2017 ESC Guidelines on the Diagnosis and Treatment of Peripheral Arterial Diseases. European Heart Journal, 2018.
- World Health Organization (WHO) - Cardiovascular diseases: Peripheral arterial disease. WHO Fact Sheets, 2023.
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Related search terms: Claudication + Claudicatio intermittens + Intermittent claudication