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[Ankle-brachial index screening for peripheral artery disease in high cardiovascular risk patients. Prospective observational study of 370 asymptomatic patients at high cardiovascular risk].

Authors :
Rada C
Oummou S
Merzouk F
Amarir B
Boussabnia G
Bougrini H
Benzaroual D
Elkarimi S
Elhattaoui M
Source :
Journal des maladies vasculaires [J Mal Vasc] 2016 Dec; Vol. 41 (6), pp. 353-357. Date of Electronic Publication: 2016 Nov 16.
Publication Year :
2016

Abstract

Introduction: Peripheral arterial disease is a marker of systemic atherosclerosis; it is associated with a high risk of cardiovascular disease. The aim of our study was to assess the prevalence of peripheral arterial disease by measuring the ankle-brachial pressure index in patients at high cardiovascular risk and to study the risk factors associated with this disease.<br />Methodology: This was a descriptive and analytic cross-sectional study which focused on 370 patients seen at the medical consultation for atherosclerosis prevention. The ankle-brachial index was measured with a portable Doppler (BIDOP 3) using 4 and 8Hz dual frequency probes. The standards were: normal ankle-brachial index 0.9 to 1.3; peripheral artery obstructive disease ankle-brachial index less than 0.9; poorly compressible artery (medial arterial calcification) ankle-brachial index greater than 1.3. Cardiovascular risk factors were also studied.<br />Results: Three hundred and seventy subjects (mean age 65.5±8.7years) were screened Cardiovascular risk factors were: sedentary lifestyle (91.5 %), hypertension (68.1 %), elevated LDL-cholesterolemia (36.3 %), diabetes (48.3 %) and tobacco smoking (33.8 %). The prevalence of peripheral artery disease was 32.4 % of which 77.5 % were asymptomatic. We found a significant correlation with smoking, diabetes, dyslipidemia and the presence of coronary artery disease or vascular cerebral disease. Screening for peripheral arterial disease (PAD) with the ankle-brachial index has increased the percentage of polyvascular patients from 6.2 to 29 %. Factors independently associated with PAD were advanced age, presence of cardiovascular disease, smoking and glycated hemoglobin.<br />Conclusion: PAD is a common condition in people at high cardiovascular risk, the frequency of asymptomatic forms justifies the screening with pocket Doppler which is a simple, inexpensive and effective test to assess the overall cardiovascular risk.<br /> (Copyright © 2016 Elsevier Masson SAS. All rights reserved.)

Details

Language :
French
ISSN :
2214-8116
Volume :
41
Issue :
6
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Journal des maladies vasculaires
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
27865565
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jmv.2016.10.003