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Based on this group recommendation, TASC A lesions are those that should have excellent results from endovascular management alone. TASC B lesions are those that should have good results from endovascular management, and endoluminal interventions should be the first treatment approach.
The Trans-Atlantic Inter-Society Consensus Document on Management of Peripheral Arterial Disease (TASC) was published in January 20001, 2, 3 as a result of cooperation between fourteen medical and surgical vascular, cardiovascular, vascular radiology and cardiology societies in Europe and North America.
TASC II divides anatomic distribution of lesions into aorto-iliac and femoral popliteal (Figs. 2 and 3). Lesion patterns are grouped into A–D lesions. Based on this group recommendation, TASC A lesions are those that should have excellent results from endovascular management alone.
Stage 2: Claudication The second stage of PAD is called claudication. At this stage, the arteries have begun to more significantly narrow and harden, resulting in uncomfortable symptoms. The core symptom of this stage is pain and weakness in the legs, feet, or calves when walking or engaging in physical activity.
The transatlantic consensus document TASC II has clearly focused physicians' attention toward the severely increased risk of peripheral artery disease (PAD). Recent data have called it an "angina pectoris equivalent".