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Helping Your Heart Online Manual

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Heart disease care specialties:

Cardiovascular disease ?
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Cardiovascular disease
Cardiologists are doctors who identify and treat problems with the heart and blood vessels. They can help you manage cardiac conditions like heart failure.
Cardiovascular disease - pediatric ?
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Cardiovascular disease - pediatric
Pediatric cardiologists are doctors who identify and treat heart problems in children.
Family medicine ?
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Family medicine
A family doctor can help you with general health needs and refer you to a specialist when needed.
Geriatric medicine ?
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Geriatric medicine
These doctors know the aging process and how it affects the heart.
Internal medicine ?
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Internal medicine
These doctors can help you manage common and complex conditions.
Thoracic surgery ?
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Thoracic surgery
Thoracic surgeons have special training to perform operations on the heart, blood vessels and lungs.

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Peripheral Artery Disease (PAD)

Other arteries in your body can become blocked with plaque (fatty deposits), too.

Warning

If you have loss of sensation, coldness and severe pain your leg, call 911. This means the blood flow to your leg has stopped.

Peripheral artery disease (PAD) occurs when plaque clogs the arteries in your legs, reducing blood flow to your legs and feet.

The lack of blood flow can cause leg or hip pain. You may notice cramping, pain or tiredness in your leg or hip muscle when you walk or exercise. The feelings go away when you rest but return when you resume activity.

PAD usually does not have symptoms until the blockage causes leg pain.

As arteries become blocked, smaller blood vessels carry the blood around the blockage. These vessels are known as collateral blood vessels.

PAD

1. In an artery free of plaque (fatty deposits), blood flows freely.

PAD

2. When plaque starts choking an artery, blood cannot flow freely, leading to peripheral artery disease (PAD).






PAD

3. When an artery becomes blocked, smaller blood vessels around the blockage carry the blood. Those smaller vessels are known as collateral blood vessels.

How a thrombus and an embolus form

bypass diagram bypass diagram

Blood cells that attach to the plaque can form a blood clot, known as a thrombus.

If the thrombus is not treated, a small blood clot may break away and float through the bloodstream.

The clot, known as an embolus, travels through the bloodstream until it becomes stuck in a blood vessel.

When the clot becomes stuck, the vessel is blocked and blood cannot pass through well, or even at all. This can cause permanent damage to the affected leg.

More about PAD


 

 

Source: Allina Patient Education, Helping Your Heart, fourth edition, cvs-ahc-90648

First published: 10/04/2002
Last updated: 06/01/2007

Reviewed by: Allina Patient Education experts

 

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