Mm. Mcdermott et al., Leg symptoms, the ankle-brachial index, and walking ability in patients with peripheral arterial disease, J GEN INT M, 14(3), 1999, pp. 173-181
OBJECTIVE: To determine how functional status and walking ability are relat
ed to both severity of lower extremity peripheral arterial disease (PAD) an
d PAD-related leg symptoms.
DESIGN: Cross-sectional study.
SETTING: Academic medical center.
PARTICIPANTS: Patients aged 55 years and older diagnosed with PAD in a bloo
d flow laboratory or general medicine practice (n = 147). Randomly selected
control patients without PAD were identified in a general medicine practic
e (n = 67).
MEASUREMENTS:Severity of PAD was measured with the ankle-brachial index (AB
I). All patients were categorized according to whether they had (1) no exer
tional leg symptoms; (2) classic intermittent claudication; (3) exertional
leg symptoms that also begin at rest (pain at rest), or (4) exertional leg
symptoms other than intermittent claudication or pain at rest (atypical exe
rtional leg symptoms). Participants completed the 36-Item Short-Form Health
Survey (SF-36) and the Walking Impairment Questionnaire (WIQ). The WIQ qua
ntifies patient-reported walking speed, walking distance, and stair-climbin
g ability, respectively, on a scale of 0 to 100 (100 = best).
MAIN RESULTS: In multivariate analyses patients with atypical exertional le
g symptoms, intermittent claudication, and pain at rest, respectively, had
progressively poorer scores for walking distance, walking speed, and stair
climbing. The ABI was measurably and independently associated with walking
distance (regression coefficient = 2.87/0.1 ABI unit, p = .002) and walking
speed (regression coefficient = 2.09/0.1 ABI unit, p = .015) scores. Among
PAD patients only, pain at rest was associated independently with all WIQ
scores and six SF-36 domains, while ABI was an independent predictor of WIQ
distance score.
CONCLUSIONS: Both PAD-related leg symptoms and ABI predict patient-perceive
d walking ability in PAD.