Cardiology is the medical specialty focused on the heart and the cardiovascular system. It involves the diagnosis, treatment, and prevention of conditions affecting the heart and blood vessels. These conditions include coronary artery disease, heart failure, arrhythmias (irregular heartbeats), and valve disorders. The field covers a broad spectrum, from congenital heart defects present at birth to acquired conditions like heart attacks.

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Symptoms and Risk Factors

Symptoms and Risk Factors

The symptoms of peripheral vascular disease often develop so slowly that people mistake them for normal signs of aging. You might think your legs are just stiff or that you are simply out of shape. However, your body gives specific warning signs when blood flow is compromised. Recognizing these signs early is the key to saving your limbs. The symptoms differ depending on whether the problem is in the arteries (delivery) or the veins (return).

Risk factors act as the fuel for this disease. Some factors, like your genes, cannot be changed. But many others, like smoking and diet, are under your control. Understanding your personal risk profile allows you to be proactive. If you have multiple risk factors, you should pay close attention to your feet and legs, searching for changes in color, temperature, or sensation.

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Intermittent Claudication (Leg Pain)

Peripheral Artery Disease (PAD)

The hallmark symptom of Peripheral Artery Disease (PAD) is intermittent claudication. This is a specific type of muscle pain or cramping in your legs that is triggered by activity and disappears with rest. It happens because your muscles need more blood when they work. If the arteries are clogged, the supply cannot meet the demand, and the muscles scream for oxygen.

Pattern of Pain

The pain is predictable. You might be able to walk exactly two blocks before your calf starts to cramp. You stop and rest for a few minutes, the pain goes away, and you can walk another two blocks. This “start-stop” pattern is classic. The pain is not in the joints; it is in the fleshy part of the muscle.

  • Occurs in the calf, thigh, hip, or buttock.
  • Walking, climbing stairs, or hurrying can trigger the pain.
  • Resting for 5-10 minutes completely relieves the pain.
  • In the early stages, the pain does not manifest when sitting or lying down.
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Progression to Rest Pain

Chronic Venous Insufficiency

If the disease gets worse, the pain may change. You might start feeling a burning or aching pain in your feet or toes while you are lying in bed at night. The condition is called ischemic rest pain. This occurs because, when lying flat, gravity does not assist in directing blood toward your feet. Without gravity, the severely blocked arteries can’t deliver even enough blood for the resting tissue. Dangling your foot over the side of the bed often helps relieve the pain.

Skin and Temperature Changes

Skin and Temperature Changes

Your skin needs blood to stay healthy, moist, and warm. When blood flow is reduced, the skin on your legs and feet changes. One of the easiest checks is temperature. If one foot feels significantly colder than the other, it should raise concerns.

The appearance of the skin also changes. It may become shiny, thin, and brittle. You might notice that hair has stopped growing on your toes or shins. Toenails may become thickened and grow very slowly. The color can also be a clue. When you elevate your legs, they may turn pale or white. When you hang them down, they may turn a reddish-purple color (rubor) as blood rushes back into the dilated vessels.

  • Compared to the rest of the body, the skin feels cool to the touch.
  • Skin looks shiny, tight, or transparent.
  • Leg hair is lost.
  • The skin appears pale when elevated and turns red when dangling.

Non-Healing Wounds and Ulcers

A major danger of vascular disease is the inability to heal. Blood carries the oxygen and nutrients needed to repair tissue. If you get a small cut, blister, or ingrown toenail, and there isn’t enough blood flow, it won’t heal. It can turn into a chronic ulcer.

Arterial Ulcers

These usually form on the toes, heels, or pressure points. They often look “punched out” with well-defined edges. They can be deep, pale, and dry, often with little bleeding. They are usually very painful, especially at night.

  • Located on toes, heels, or ankles.
  • The base of the sore is dry and pale, with minimal bleeding.
  • Very painful.
  • Skin around the sore is cold and hairless.

Venous Ulcers

These are caused by blood pooling in the veins. They usually form on the inner side of the ankle or lower calf. They are often shallow, with irregular edges, and can be quite wet or “weepy.” The skin around them is often discolored brown or red and may be swollen.

  • These lesions typically occur on the inner ankle or calf.
  • The base of these lesions is shallow, moist, and red.
  • The condition is often painless or mildly achy.
  • Swollen, discolored skin surrounds the area.

Critical Limb Ischemia

Critical Limb Ischemia

This is the most severe stage of PAD. It implies that the blood flow is so blocked that the tissue is in immediate danger of dying. Symptoms include severe pain at rest, cold and numb legs, and sores that are turning black (gangrene).

Gangrene is the death of body tissue due to a lack of blood flow or a serious bacterial infection. It usually starts in the toes. The skin turns black and shriveled (dry gangrene) or swollen and foul-smelling (wet gangrene). This condition is a medical emergency that requires immediate revascularization (opening the artery) to prevent amputation.

  • Severe pain in feet or toes that disrupts sleep.
  • The limb appears cold, numb, or paralyzed.
  • The affected tissue may turn black or gray in color.
  • A foul odor is indicative of an infection.

Smoking and Vascular Damage

Smoking and Vascular Damage

Smoking is the most potent risk factor for developing PVD. The chemicals in tobacco smoke, particularly nicotine and carbon monoxide, wreak havoc on the cardiovascular system. Nicotine causes blood vessels to constrict (tighten), instantly reducing blood flow.

More permanently, smoking damages the endothelial lining—the smooth inner skin of your arteries. This damage creates a rough surface where plaque can easily stick and build up. Smoking also makes your blood stickier and more likely to form clots. Smokers are diagnosed with PVD earlier, have more severe symptoms, and are much more likely to require amputation than non-smokers.

  • Smoking damages the walls of arteries, which invites the formation of plaque.
  • Smoking constricts blood vessels, leading to an immediate reduction in flow.
  • This increases the risk of blood clotting.
  • This condition accelerates the progression of pre-existing diseases

Diabetes and Neuropathy

Diabetes is a double threat. High blood sugar levels chemically damage blood vessels, making them stiff and narrow. People with diabetes tend to develop plaque in the smaller arteries below the knee, which are harder to treat surgically.

Additionally, diabetes causes neuropathy—nerve damage. This leads to a loss of sensation in the feet. A diabetic patient might have severe PVD but feel no pain when they step on a tack or wear tight shoes. A small wound can rapidly become a massive infection without the patient realizing it because the patient does not feel the injury and has poor blood flow to heal This condition also has the potential to accelerate it. This combination is the leading cause of non-traumatic amputations.

  • This condition also has the potential to accelerate atherosclerosis in smaller vessels.
  • Masks pain symptoms due to nerve damage.
  • Impairs immune responses to infections.
  • Requires daily foot inspections.

High Blood Pressure and Cholesterol

High Blood Pressure and Cholesterol

Hypertension (high blood pressure) acts like a hammer on your artery walls. The constant high pressure causes microscopic tears in the arterial lining. Your body tries to patch these tears with plaque, leading to blockages. It also causes the artery walls to thicken and stiffen, losing their natural elasticity.

Cholesterol is the building block of plaque. Low-density lipoprotein (LDL), or “bad” cholesterol, circulates in the blood and deposits into the damaged artery walls. Over time, these deposits grow, harden with calcium, and narrow the channel. High levels of triglycerides (another type of blood fat) also contribute to this process.

  • Hypertension creates physical damage to vessel walls.
  • LDL cholesterol forms the core of the blockage.
  • Both conditions are “silent” until damage is done.
  • Management is essential for slowing disease progression

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FREQUENTLY ASKED QUESTIONS

Why do my legs feel heavy?

Heaviness is often a sign of venous disease. When blood pools in your legs instead of returning to the heart, it adds weight and pressure, making your legs feel like lead weights, especially after standing for a long time.

Yes. Stress triggers the release of adrenaline, which constricts blood vessels. If you already have narrow arteries, this extra tightening can worsen symptoms or trigger spasms in conditions like Raynaud’s.

Usually, back pain is spinal. However, a blockage in the aorta or iliac arteries (in the belly/pelvis) can cause pain in the buttocks and hips that mimics back issues. If the pain only happens when walking, it might be vascular

Atherosclerosis is rarely perfectly symmetrical. You might have a severe blockage in the right femoral artery while the left one is only mildly narrowed. This phenomenon leads to symptoms being much more pronounced on one side.

It is rare but possible. Young people can get PVD due to genetic clotting disorders, severe diabetes, autoimmune conditions (vasculitis), or anatomical entrapment syndromes where muscles pinch arteries.

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