Background: Arterial disease of the legs causes symptoms such as pain when walking and may ultimately lead to a leg amputation. Many older people with arterial disease of the legs also have problems with their thinking and memory. Blood flow in the brain may be altered in these people and may be a cause for memory and thinking problems. Aim: The aim of this project is to investigate whether people with arterial disease of the legs have altered blood flow in the brain causing problems with memory and thinking. Research plan: Twenty people with arterial disease of the legs causing pain while walking and twenty healthy people will have a series of non-invasive assessments. Arterial disease in the legs will be measured using ankle blood pressures before and after walking. Blood flow in the brain will be measured using ultrasound whilst performing memory and thinking tests. Results will be compared between the people with arterial disease in the legs and the healthy people to see if there are any differences in blood flow to the brain and memory and thinking. Benefits to society: This project will help determine if there is a link between arterial disease of the legs and memory and thinking problems caused by altered blood flow in the brain. It will enable future research in people with cognitive impairment caused by altered blood supply to the brain and to prevent confusion and further memory and thinking problems in people undergoing surgery for arterial disease of the legs.
Study Type
OBSERVATIONAL
Enrollment
40
Measurement of cerebral haemodynamics using transcranial Doppler to insonate the middle cerebral arteries bilaterally testing neurovascular coupling with selected domains from the Addenbrooks cognitive examination III and the digit span forward and backwards.
Ratio of ankle to brachial blood pressure measured using handheld Doppler at rest and after exercise (six-minute walk test).
Supervised brisk walk for six minutes. Time and distance to onset of claudication pain and total distance walked (and total time walked if did not complete the full six minutes).
Glenfield Hospital Leicester
Leicester, Leicestershire, United Kingdom
RECRUITINGPeak % change of CBv from baseline
Change in response to performance of the ACE-III Cognitive Examination and Digit Span forward and backward.
Time frame: Baseline
Autoregulation index (Tieck's model)
Change in response to performance of the ACE-III Cognitive Examination and Digit Span forward and backward.
Time frame: Baseline
Absolute score achieved on the Addenboook's cognitive examination (III)
Minimum score 0; Maximum score 100 (High scores indicate better cognitive performance)
Time frame: Baseline
Digit span forward and backward scores
Maximum list length correctly recalled and response consistency (total correct trials)
Time frame: Baseline
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