
Peripheral Arterial Disease Care
From Risk to Recovery
Living with peripheral arterial disease (PAD), also known as peripheral vascular disease, can put you at risk for having a heart attack or stroke. Making healthy changes in your lifestyle along with taking medications can help reduce your risks and improve symptoms.
Your doctor may recommend lifestyle changes such as tobacco treatment, exercise, weight loss, healthy diet, and help you manage high blood pressure and cholesterol. Severe cases may require a procedure called angioplasty or bypass surgery that opens narrowed arteries or re-routes blood flow.

We're dedicated to helping you feel better, stay active, and thrive—through every stage of your journey.
Peripheral Artery Disease Care Locations
Related Specialties
Cardiovascular Rehabilitation
Medically supervised program to stabilize, slow, or even reverse the progression of cardiovascular disease.
Lifestyle Medicine
Good choices are at the center of lifestyle medicine, a specialty focused on preventing, treating, managing or even reversing many chronic diseases.

Lifestyle Medicine
Peripheral Artery Disease Program
The St. Luke's lifestyle medicine team offers a comprehensive 12-week program designed to help you manage PAD and improve your quality of life.
Through supervised exercise, personalized education, and support from a team of medical professionals, we help you reduce symptoms, lower risk factors, and walk with greater ease and confidence.
Related Conditions
Stroke