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1. Peripheral artery disease causes consistent gait irregularities regardless of the location of leg claudication pain.

2. Claudicating patients with peripheral artery disease have meaningful improvement in walking speed after supervised exercise therapy.

3. Supervised walking exercise therapy improves gait biomechanics in patients with peripheral artery disease.

4. Muscle strength and control characteristics are altered by peripheral artery disease.

5. Abnormal myofiber morphology and limb dysfunction in claudication.

6. Patients with peripheral arterial disease exhibit reduced joint powers compared to velocity-matched controls.

7. Pharmacological treatment of intermittent claudication does not have a significant effect on gait impairments during claudication pain.

8. Gait variability of patients with intermittent claudication is similar before and after the onset of claudication pain.

9. Abnormal joint powers before and after the onset of claudication symptoms.

10. Treatment with pharmacological agents in peripheral arterial disease patients does not result in biomechanical gait changes.

11. Joint torques and powers are reduced during ambulation for both limbs in patients with unilateral claudication.

12. Invited commentary.

13. Peripheral arterial disease affects kinematics during walking.

14. Claudication distances and the Walking Impairment Questionnaire best describe the ambulatory limitations in patients with symptomatic peripheral arterial disease.

15. Peripheral arterial disease affects ground reaction forces during walking.

16. A biomechanical perspective on walking in patients with peripheral artery disease.

17. Gait Mechanics Differences Between Healthy Controls and Patients With Peripheral Artery Disease After Adjusting for Gait Velocity, Stride Length, and Step Width.

18. The effect of pharmacological treatment on gait biomechanics in peripheral arterial disease patients.

19. Gait variability is altered in patients with peripheral arterial disease.

20. Increased minimum toe clearance variability in patients with peripheral arterial disease.

21. External work is deficient in both limbs of patients with unilateral PAD

22. Peripheral arterial disease affects the frequency response of ground reaction forces during walking

23. Mitochondrial defects and oxidative damage in patients with peripheral arterial disease

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