Affiliation:
1. Vascular Services of Ohio, Columbus, OH, USA,
Abstract
In contradistinction to chronic critical limb ischemia, the peripheral arterial disease patient with intermittent claudication is at relatively low risk for limb loss. As a result, initial claudication management should employ non-interventional therapies rather than immediate catheter-based or surgical revascularization. Although exercise therapy is the most efficacious conservative treatment for claudication, supervised exercise programs are not widely available at present. Consequently, a pharmacologic agent can be utilized to lessen the symptoms and improve the function of the claudicant. This manuscript provides a comprehensive review of the various pharmacotherapies that have been investigated for improving walking distance in the setting of intermittent claudication. Cilostazol, a phosphodiesterase III inhibitor, appears to provide the greatest benefit, significantly improving not only walking distance but quality of life as well. Early trials indicate that propionyl-l-carnitine, oral prostaglandins, l-arginine, and therapeutic angiogenesis may eventually yield significant benefit in lessening the symptoms of intermittent claudication.
Subject
Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine
Cited by
16 articles.
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