Peripheral artery disease causes consistent gait irregularities regardless of the location of leg claudication pain

Ann Phys Rehabil Med. 2024 Apr;67(3):101793. doi: 10.1016/j.rehab.2023.101793. Epub 2023 Dec 20.

Abstract

Background: The most common symptom of peripheral artery disease (PAD) is intermittent claudication that involves the calf, thigh, and/or buttock muscles. How the specific location of this leg pain is related to altered gait, however, is unknown.

Objectives: We hypothesized that because the location of claudication symptoms uniquely affects different leg muscle groups in people with PAD, this would produce distinctive walking patterns.

Methods: A total of 105 participants with PAD and 35 age-matched older volunteers without PAD (CTRL) were recruited. Participants completed walking impairment questionnaires (WIQ), Gardner-Skinner progressive treadmill tests, the six-minute walk test, and we performed an advanced evaluation of the biomechanics of their overground walking. Participants with PAD were categorized into 4 groups according to their stated pain location(s): calf only (C, n = 43); thigh and calf (TC, n = 18); buttock and calf (BC, n = 15); or buttock, thigh, and calf (BTC, n = 29). Outcomes were compared between CTRL, C, TC, BC and BTC groups using a one-way ANOVA with post-hoc comparisons to identify and assess statistically significant differences.

Results: There were no significant differences between CTRL, C, TC, BC and BTC groups in distances walked or walking speed when either pain-free or experiencing claudication pain. Each participant with PAD had significantly dysfunctional biomechanical gait parameters, even when pain-free, when compared to CTRL (pain-free) walking data. During pain-free walking, out of the 18 gait parameters evaluated, we only identified significant differences in hip power generation during push-off (in C and TC groups) and in knee power absorption during weight acceptance (in TC and BC groups). There were no between-group differences in gait parameters while people with PAD were walking with claudication pain.

Conclusions: Our data demonstrate that PAD affects the ischemic lower extremities in a diffuse manner irrespective of the location of claudication symptoms.

Database registration: ClinicalTrials.gov NCT01970332.

Keywords: Claudication; Gait biomechanics; Location of claudication pain; Peripheral artery disease.

Publication types

  • Clinical Trial

MeSH terms

  • Gait / physiology
  • Humans
  • Intermittent Claudication* / etiology
  • Leg
  • Pain / etiology
  • Peripheral Arterial Disease* / complications
  • Walking / physiology

Associated data

  • ClinicalTrials.gov/NCT01970332