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What Claudication Feels Like and When to See a Specialist

What Claudication Feels Like and When to See a Specialist

Most people easily ignore or attribute leg pain while walking to age, being out of shape or overexertion.
But if the pain always comes on when you walk and goes away as soon as you sit down or stand still, that’s different.
This kind of pattern almost always suggests claudication, as the arteries in your legs are not supplying enough blood.
Knowing what to look for matters because catching it early makes a real difference.

Schedule an appointment with Heart Vascular & Leg Center today.

 

What Does Claudication Actually Feel Like?

Claudication has a very specific feeling. It is not simply muscle pain.
Here’s what most people notice:

  • A cramping or aching pain in the calf, thigh or buttock muscles
  • The pain gets worse the longer you walk
  • Pain which makes you stop after a certain distance of walking
  • When standing still for a few minutes, the pain totally disappears

The cycle repeats. Walk, pain, stop, relief. Because your leg muscles demand more oxygen while you are moving than the narrowed arteries can supply.

Call us at 661-324-4100 to book your appointment!

 

Why Claudication Happens

Claudication usually comes from peripheral artery disease, or PAD. Fatty deposits build up inside the arteries that supply your legs. As they narrow, less blood gets through.
Your leg muscles manage fine when you’re sitting or standing. But the moment you start walking, they need more blood than those narrowed arteries can deliver. That’s when the cramping starts.

Schedule an appointment.

 

Some Common Areas Where You’ll Feel It

Where you feel claudication depends on which arteries are affected.

Most common spots:

  • Calf muscles: Where most people notice it first
  • Thighs: Usually means blockages higher up
  • Buttocks or hips: Points to issues in the larger arteries
  • Feet: Less common, typically shows up with more advanced disease

Some people feel it in one area. Others notice it in multiple spots.

Schedule an appointment.

 

When Should You Really See a Specialist?

Not all leg cramps require a physician but claudication does. Delaying too much allows those arteries to become even narrower, and that can cause severe issues.

See a specialist if:

  • Leg pain consistently starts when you walk and stops when you rest
  • You can only walk a short distance before cramping starts
  • The pain is getting worse or happening sooner
  • You have diabetes, high blood pressure, or you smoke
  • Your legs feel cold or look paler than usual

Schedule an appointment.

 

What a Vascular Specialist Can Do

At Heart Vascular & Leg Center, we focus on PAD treatment using minimally invasive procedures.
This is aimed at restoring blood flow and averting amputation. The case of each patient is unique and thus, the treatment becomes customized.
What to expect during your visit:

  • Discussion of your symptoms and health history
  • Physical exam and pulse checks in your legs
  • Imaging to see where the arteries are narrowed
  • Treatment options based on your specific situation

Most procedures are outpatient. You go home the same day.

Book an appointment through our website or call us at 661-324-4100!

 

Don’t Wait Until It’s Too Late

Claudication is a sign that your body is telling you something must be done. It does not disappear by neglecting it.
Through proper management, however, PAD can be dealt with and you can resume normal activities without pain, restricting the kinds of activities in which you engage.
Contact Heart Vascular & Leg Center in case you are experiencing pain in your legs that is affecting your normal routine. We can help!

Schedule Your Appointment With Heart Vascular & Leg Center Today

 

FAQs

Is claudication the same as a leg cramp?
No. Normal cramps can occur at random and have no specific pattern. Claudication always occurs during walking or any kind of exercise and stops when the person rests.

Can claudication be reversed?
Even if narrowing of the arteries cannot always be completely ‘reversed,’ a state where blood can flow through and symptoms are absent can be attained.
Both in lifestyle changes and interventions, they play roles.

How fast does it actually develop?
That varies between individuals; some have a very slow development over years while others rapidly worsen. It is best caught early so that it does not advance.

What if I leave it alone?
Eventually, in someone with PAD who does not receive treatment, limb ischemia could set in!
This is where the limbs do not get enough blood and start hurting even at rest or develop non-healing wounds. This can eventually lead to tissue death.