Lifestyle Affects Outcome of Peripheral Artery Procedure: Study
WEDNESDAY, Dec. 26 (HealthDay News) -- Patients with blocked leg arteries are less likely to suffer complications after a procedure to open their arteries if they quit smoking and take aspirin and cholesterol-lowering statins, a new study indicates.
However, too few patients take such steps to relieve leg pain and cramping associated with peripheral artery disease, also known as PAD, according to the researchers.
The new study of more than 1,300 patients found that only about 47 percent of them did not smoke and were taking aspirin and a statin -- drugs that can reduce blood clots and improve blood flow -- when they were admitted to hospital for a peripheral vascular intervention, such as angioplasty, which is performed to open blocked leg arteries and improve blood flow.
When they were discharged from hospital, 71 percent of the patients were taking aspirin and a statin and either did not smoke or still smoked but had counseling to help them quit smoking.
Six months after undergoing the vascular procedure, the rate of complications -- such as repeat peripheral vascular intervention, surgery to save the limb, and amputation -- was 7 percent for those who took aspirin and statin and nearly 16 percent for those who did not, according to the study released online in advance of print publication in the journal Circulation: Cardiovascular Interventions.
"The modest improvement in statin prescription before patients were discharged signifies a missed opportunity to provide a life-saving intervention for PAD patients," study author Dr. P. Michael Grossman, an interventional cardiologist at the University of Michigan Cardiovascular Center, said in a university news release.
More information
The U.S. National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute has more about peripheral artery disease.
-- Robert Preidt
Copyright © 2012 HealthDay. All rights reserved.
Health News Today
Feed- Cost of Treating Strokes in U.S. Could Soar to $180B Annually by 2030: Report 05/22/2013
- Age, Other Illnesses May Make Prostate Cancer Treatment Unnecessary 05/21/2013
- Antidepressants May Be Helpful for Some Heart Patients: Study 05/21/2013
- COPD Patients May Do Fine With Shorter Course of Steroids 05/21/2013
- Heart Attack? Doctors Soon May Have an App for That 05/17/2013
- View More Heart, Blood and Circulation News
Popular Features
Take a Personalized Health Test
How well are you controlling your symptoms?
What's Causing Your Symptoms?
15 Ways To Get Better Medicine

People who are actively involved in their medical care stay healthier, recover quicker when they're ill, and live longer, healthier lives.