Hemostemix Library

Why Wounds Won't Heal in PAD — And What to Do About It

Written by Hemostemix | Mar 16, 2026 1:23:19 PM

Understanding non-healing wounds in peripheral artery disease, why standard wound care often isn't enough, and when to escalate.

A wound that will not close is not just frustrating. In a patient with peripheral artery disease, it is a warning sign that something more serious is happening beneath the surface.

Non-healing wounds in PAD are one of the most common reasons patients end up in urgent vascular consultations, and one of the most misunderstood. Dressings get changed. Antibiotics get prescribed. Weeks pass. The wound stays open, or gets worse.

The problem is not the wound. The problem is the blood supply that the wound needs to close. This article explains why non-healing wounds happen in PAD, what standard wound care can and cannot do, and when to seek a different level of evaluation.

Why Wounds Don't Heal in Peripheral Artery Disease

 

Wound healing is an active, high-demand biological process. New cells need to migrate to the wound site. Collagen needs to be laid down. Immune cells need to clear bacteria and debris. All of that requires a steady, adequate supply of oxygen and nutrients delivered through the bloodstream.

In patients with peripheral artery disease, that supply is compromised. Narrowed or blocked arteries mean the tissue in the lower leg and foot is already working with reduced circulation. When a wound opens, the tissue around it does not have the vascular capacity to support the healing process.

Standard wound care treats the wound. In PAD, the wound is a symptom. The underlying problem is circulation, and dressings alone cannot fix that.

This is why non-healing wounds in PAD behave differently from ordinary wounds. They are not simply slow to heal. They are caught in a biological stalemate where the environment required for healing does not exist.

What Makes a Wound 'Non-Healing'?

 

Any wound on the foot or lower leg in a patient with known PAD or diabetes that has not shown clear, measurable improvement after four to six weeks of appropriate wound care should be considered a non-healing wound and evaluated urgently.

Signs that a wound is not progressing as it should include:

  • No reduction in wound size after several weeks of consistent treatment
  • Increasing pain around the wound, especially at rest or at night
  • Changes in color at the wound edges or surrounding skin
  • Persistent drainage or signs of infection that do not resolve with antibiotics
  • Darkening or blackening of the toe, foot, or wound margins

That last sign, tissue darkening or blackening, is a medical emergency. It indicates tissue death and requires immediate vascular evaluation. Do not wait for a scheduled appointment.

When to Seek Urgent Care

If a wound on the foot or lower leg is darkening, has visible black or grey tissue, or is accompanied by severe rest pain, seek emergency vascular evaluation immediately. This is not a wound care issue. It is a vascular emergency.

 

The Role of Ischemia in Chronic Wounds

 

Ischemia means inadequate blood supply to tissue. When ischemia is severe and persistent, it creates a self-reinforcing cycle that makes healing progressively harder:

Oxygen-deprived tissue shifts to emergency metabolism, producing toxic byproducts
Those byproducts trigger widespread inflammation in the surrounding tissue
Inflammation damages the small blood vessels that remain
Damaged vessels reduce delivery of healing cells and growth factors
The wound environment becomes increasingly hostile to repair

This is not a wound that is waiting for better dressings. It is a wound caught in a cycle that can only be broken by addressing the underlying circulation problem.

In patients with advanced PAD, particularly those with disease extending into the smaller calf and foot vessels, this cycle can be extremely difficult to interrupt through conventional means.

What Standard Wound Care Can and Cannot Do

 

Good wound care matters. Keeping a wound clean, offloaded, and appropriately dressed reduces the risk of infection, manages moisture, and protects fragile tissue. For patients with adequate circulation, this is often enough to allow healing to progress.

For patients with PAD and significantly reduced blood flow, wound care alone has clear limits:

Dressings cannot substitute for the oxygen and nutrients that only blood flow provides
Antibiotics treat infection but do not address the ischemic environment that makes infection more likely
Offloading reduces mechanical stress but does not restore microvascular perfusion

The goal of wound care in a PAD patient should always be to protect and stabilize the wound while the underlying vascular problem is addressed. It is a supportive measure, not a standalone treatment.

The Vascular Evaluation Every Wound Care Patient Needs

 

If you or a family member has a non-healing wound and has not yet seen a vascular specialist, that referral is the most important next step. A vascular evaluation will assess:

Ankle-brachial index (ABI) and toe pressure measurements to quantify blood flow
Duplex ultrasound or advanced imaging to identify where blockages are located
Whether revascularization, bypass surgery, or stenting may be feasible
The overall severity of the ischemia and its relationship to the wound

Delays in vascular evaluation are consistently associated with worse outcomes in PAD wound patients. The longer a non-healing wound goes without adequate circulation assessment, the narrower the treatment window becomes.

When Surgery Is No Longer an Option

 

For some patients, a vascular evaluation will confirm that conventional revascularization, bypass, angioplasty, or stenting, is no longer technically feasible. Disease has extended too far into the small vessels. Prior procedures have been exhausted. There is no surgical target remaining.

This is what clinicians call no-option CLTI, and it is more common than most patients realize. For these patients, the question of how to address a non-healing wound becomes significantly more complex.

Investigational research programs are studying biological approaches that may help support blood flow and assist the body's natural repair processes in tissue that cannot be reached by surgery. ACP-01, an investigational autologous stem cell therapy, is being studied in patients with advanced PAD and non-healing wounds under physician supervision in regulated clinical settings. Published data indicate potential in selected patient populations, and safety and effectiveness continue to be studied.

 

For Patients Who Have Been Told Surgery Is Not Possible

A non-healing wound in a no-option patient is not a wound care problem. It is a vascular biology problem. If you have been told that no further surgical options exist and you have a wound that is not progressing, ask your physician specifically about investigational research pathways.

 

What to Do Right Now

 

If you are managing a wound that is not improving, here is a clear sequence of steps:

Request a vascular consultation if you have not had one, or get a second opinion if you have
Ask specifically about your ankle-brachial index and toe pressure measurements
Ask your wound care team whether circulation has been formally evaluated as a contributing factor
If revascularization has been ruled out, ask about investigational research options
Do not wait for the wound to become an emergency before escalating

A wound that will not close deserves more than a dressing change. It deserves a full understanding of why it is not closing, and a care team that is looking at the whole picture.

Any wound on the foot or lower leg in a patient with PAD or diabetes that has not improved after four to six weeks of appropriate care warrants urgent vascular assessment, not more waiting.

 

Educational content only. Not medical advice. ACP-01 is an investigational therapy and has not been approved by the FDA or Health Canada. Safety and effectiveness continue to be studied. Individual outcomes cannot be predicted or guaranteed.