In this project, the investigators propose to use high-resolution magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) to measure blood perfusion in different groups of calf muscle. This imaging approach is standard of care for evaluation of coronary artery disease (CAD), and has never been successfully applied to PAD. Preliminary results show distinct patterns of muscle perfusion between healthy and PAD patients, and thus great promise of the technique. The investigators will first verify the reproducibility of the technique, and then compare the calf muscle perfusion measures in PAD patients against healthy age-matched controls. This comparison will test the feasibility of detecting functional abnormality in PAD patients. After the baseline scans, the PAD patients will opt to undergo a 12-week supervised exercise therapy, and then a post-therapy MRI scan. Comparison of the pre- and post-therapy measurements will indicate how the therapy improves the calf-muscle perfusion, and how this perfusion change correlates with increases in patient's walking ability. The long term goals of this project are to develop an improved diagnostic test for patients with PAD to predict who will benefit from therapeutic intervention. The MRI perfusion studies of calf muscle can be performed in conjunction with routine peripheral MR angiography to assess the functional significance of vascular stenosis.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
NON_RANDOMIZED
Purpose
DIAGNOSTIC
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
90
The therapy will be conducted three times each week for 12 weeks. Each session takes 1 hour, consisting of 5 minutes of warmup activities, 50 minutes of intermittent exercise, and 5 minutes of cool-down activities. Exercise consists of walking on a treadmill initiated at 2 mph and 0% grade, until claudication pain becomes moderately severe. After claudication pain subsides, the subject will restart the walk. At the end of the session, the total exercise duration will be recorded. After a patient is able to walk 8-10 minutes at the initial workload, the grade is increased by 1-2%, or the speed is increased by 0.5 mph as tolerated.
Massachusetts General Hospital
Boston, Massachusetts, United States
Stress-rest calf-muscle perfusion
Perfusion in the different calf muscle groups following exercises of low (rest) and high (stress) intensities
Time frame: Single visit (~90 minutes)
Perfusion changes following supervised exercise therapy
Change in stress-rest calf-muscle perfusion in PAD patients following the 12-week supervised exercise therapy
Time frame: Before and after supervised exercise therapy (12 weeks)
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