Abstract

Patients with symptomatic peripheral artery disease (PAD) have an elevated prevalence of internal carotid artery (ICA) stenosis and cerebral infarction, although the correlations between the severity of PAD and cerebral infarction, cerebral white matter lesion (WML), or intracranial or extracranial artery stenosis are unclear. We evaluated the prevalence of cardiovascular risk factors, cerebral infarction, and WML on magnetic resonance imaging and intracranial and extracranial carotid artery stenoses on magnetic resonance angiography in patients with symptomatic PAD (n = 136; males/females [M/F] 109/27) and a control group comprised of patients without PAD (n = 92; M/F 57/35). PAD was classified by Fontaine stage (stage II, n = 46; stage III, n = 20; stage IV, n = 70). Cerebral infarctions were classified into symptomatic or asymptomatic groups. WMLs were evaluated according to Fazekas stage. Artery stenosis was classified as normal (no stenosis), mild (stenosis <50%), moderate (stenosis ≥ 50%), severe (tight stenosis), and obstruction on magnetic resonance angiography. Diabetes mellitus (DM), dyslipidemia, coronary artery disease (CAD), and chronic kidney disease (CKD), as well as symptomatic cerebral infarction and WML, were more frequent in patients with Fontaine III/IV PAD than without PAD. The prevalence rates of cerebral infarction and WML in patients with Fontaine stage II PAD were between those of the control and Fontaine III/IV PAD patients. Supraclinoid and cervical ICA stenoses (>50%) were more frequent in patients with Fontaine stage IV PAD than without PAD. Our results indicate that patients with advanced PAD have an increased prevalence of symptomatic cerebral infarction, WML, and intracranial and cervical ICA stenosis as well as DM, CAD, and CKD.

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