Medline ® Abstract for Reference 35
of 'Clinical features and diagnosis of lower extremity peripheral artery disease'
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Association between the ankle-brachial index and future coronary calcium (the Rancho Bernardo study).
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Allison MA, Laughlin GA, Barrett-Connor E, Langer R
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Am J Cardiol. 2006;97(2):181. Epub 2005 Nov 18.
This study investigated whether the ankle-brachial index (ABI) is associated with coronary artery calcium (CAC) in a cohort of men and women who were free of clinical coronary heart disease. CAC was assessed by electron beam computed tomography in 279 community-based subjects who also had ABI measurements 7 years previously. Patients' mean age was 65.8 years and 51.3% were women. Thirty-three patients (11.8%) had an ABI<1.0, 11 (3.9%) had an ABI<0.9, and 4 (1.4%) had an ABI<0.8. Prevalences of any CAC were 70% for women and 95% for men. In men and women, there was a U-shaped relation between CAC and ABI category, with the lowest CAC score being in the interval from 1.0 to 1.09. On multivariable analysis, women whose ABI was<1.0 had a 2.7-fold higher risk (p = 0.03) for increasing amounts of CAC. Men whose ABI was below this same cutpoint had a similar but nonsignificant increase in risk (odds ratio 2.1, p = 0.1). In conclusion, ABI was significantly associated with the presence and extent of future CAC measured 7 years later.
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The Department of Family and Preventive Medicine, University of California at San Diego, La Jolla, California, USA. mallison@ucsd.edu
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