Your Feet, Your Heart: What’s the Connection?
PAD and CAD: If you have one, you are at increased risk for the other
If you have coronary artery disease (CAD, sometimes also called coronary heart disease), you are at increased risk of peripheral artery disease, or PAD. Similarly, if you have PAD, you are at increased risk for CAD as well.
These two conditions have overlapping risk factors. The following can put you at higher risk for PAD and CAD:
- Smoking
- Increased age
- High cholesterol
- High blood pressure
- Being overweight
- Being physically inactive
- Having diabetes
Understand your risk factors
Smokers face the highest risk for CAD and PAD. Quitting smoking lowers your risk. It’s the best thing you can do for your overall health.
If you have high cholesterol, be sure to continue any cholesterol-lowering medications, such as statins, you have been prescribed. If prescribed, such medications are important for lowering the risk for heart disease and stroke. If you are living with CAD, PAD or both, you have a higher risk for heart disease and stroke.
A shared cause
Both CAD and PAD are caused by atherosclerosis. Atherosclerosis results when cholesterol and fatty deposits, called plaque, build up in the artery walls.
The resulting narrowing of the arteries can be serious. The plaque that builds up in the arteries of the heart may cause a heart attack. It also puts you at risk for other dangerous conditions, such as stroke.
Management is possible
By minimizing the risk factors you can control, you can lower your chances of having CAD or PAD.
If you are living with CAD or PAD, you can lessen the impact of both conditions. Managing these conditions depends on lifestyle changes, including proper diet and physical activity and medications that your health care professional may recommend. Early detection is key to managing CAD or PAD.