Angiogenesis and Mechanisms of Exercise Training in PAD

Project: Research project

Project Details

Description

DESCRIPTION (provided by applicant): Peripheral arterial disease (PAD) impairs arterial blood flow to the legs & is a major indicator of systemic atherosclerosis. PAD affects 5% of the US population over 50. Approx 1/3 of patients with PAD have typical claudication, defined as pain in one or both legs on walking that is relieved by rest. Patients with claudication have a marked impairment in exercise performance similar to patients with NYHA class III heart failure. Goals of treatment for PAD patients include risk-factor modification & antiplatelet drug therapy to address increased cardiovascular mortality risk. Supervised exercise training is the most efficacious treatment to improve walking capacity, demonstrated in many (small) randomized trials. Neither the pathophysiology of claudication nor the mechanism(s) by which exercise training improves walking times in persons with IC are completely understood. It is unknown how long-term exercise training affects skeletal muscle or to what extent skeletal muscle abnormalities in PAD are reversible. Women have been largely underrepresented in mechanistic studies of IC and exercise training. There is an urgent need for clinical research directed towards defining the basis of the exercise training changes induced in PAD patients in order to: 1) provide insights into the general pathophysiology of the exercise impairment in PAD; 2) permit scientifically plausible & testable modifications to currently prescribed exercise regimens to better employ this critical therapeutic modality &, 3) identify novel targets from pharmacotherapy that are capable of inducing the repertoire of molecular responses induced by exercise training. In this RFA (HL-03-003) (AMNESTI in PAD), men & women (n=160), over 40 years, with IC & an ankle/brachial systolic blood pressure ratio (ABI)
StatusNot started

Funding

  • National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute: $457,100.00
  • National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute: $344,271.00

Fingerprint

Explore the research topics touched on by this project. These labels are generated based on the underlying awards/grants. Together they form a unique fingerprint.