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Peripheral Arterial Disease Study (PERART): Prevalence and predictive values of asymptomatic peripheral arterial occlusive disease related to cardiovascular morbidity and mortality

BACKGROUND: The early diagnosis of atherosclerotic disease is essential for developing preventive strategies in populations at high risk and acting when the disease is still asymptomatic. A low ankle-arm index (AAI) is a good marker of vascular events and may be diminished without presenting symptom...

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Autores principales: Alzamora, María Teresa, Baena-Díez, José Miguel, Sorribes, Marta, Forés, Rosa, Toran, Pere, Vicheto, Marisa, Pera, Guillem, Reina, María Dolores, Albaladejo, Carlos, Llussà, Judith, Bundó, Magda, Sancho, Amparo, Heras, Antonio, Rubiés, Joan, Arenillas, Juan Francisco
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2007
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2241612/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/18070367
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1471-2458-7-348
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author Alzamora, María Teresa
Baena-Díez, José Miguel
Sorribes, Marta
Forés, Rosa
Toran, Pere
Vicheto, Marisa
Pera, Guillem
Reina, María Dolores
Albaladejo, Carlos
Llussà, Judith
Bundó, Magda
Sancho, Amparo
Heras, Antonio
Rubiés, Joan
Arenillas, Juan Francisco
author_facet Alzamora, María Teresa
Baena-Díez, José Miguel
Sorribes, Marta
Forés, Rosa
Toran, Pere
Vicheto, Marisa
Pera, Guillem
Reina, María Dolores
Albaladejo, Carlos
Llussà, Judith
Bundó, Magda
Sancho, Amparo
Heras, Antonio
Rubiés, Joan
Arenillas, Juan Francisco
author_sort Alzamora, María Teresa
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: The early diagnosis of atherosclerotic disease is essential for developing preventive strategies in populations at high risk and acting when the disease is still asymptomatic. A low ankle-arm index (AAI) is a good marker of vascular events and may be diminished without presenting symptomatology (silent peripheral arterial disease). The aim of the PERART study (PERipheral ARTerial disease) is to determine the prevalence of peripheral arterial disease (both silent and symptomatic) in a general population of both sexes and determine its predictive value related to morbimortality (cohort study). METHODS/DESIGN: This cross-over, cohort study consists of 2 phases: firstly a descriptive, transversal cross-over study to determine the prevalence of peripheral arterial disease, and secondly, a cohort study to evaluate the predictive value of AAI in relation to cardiovascular morbimortality. From September 2006 to June 2007, a total of 3,010 patients over the age of 50 years will be randomly selected from a population adscribed to 24 healthcare centres in the province of Barcelona (Spain). The diagnostic criteria of peripheral arterial disease will be considered as an AAI < 0.90, determined by portable Doppler (8 Mhz probe) measured twice by trained personnel. Cardiovascular risk will be calculated with the Framingham-Wilson tables, with Framingham calibrated by the REGICOR and SCORE groups. The subjects included will be evaluted every 6 months by telephone interview and the clnical history and death registries will be reviewed. The appearance of the following cardiovascular events will be considered as variables of response: transitory ischaemic accident, ictus, angina, myocardial infartction, symptomatic abdominal aneurysm and vascular mortality. DISCUSSION: In this study we hope to determine the prevalence of peripheral arterial disease, especially the silent forms, in the general population and establish its relationship with cardiovascular morbimortality. A low AAI may be a better marker of arterial disease than the classical cardiovascular risk factors and may, therefore, contribute to improving the predictive value of the equations of cardiovascular risk and thereby allowing optimisation of multifactorial treatment of atherosclerotic disease.
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spelling pubmed-22416122008-02-13 Peripheral Arterial Disease Study (PERART): Prevalence and predictive values of asymptomatic peripheral arterial occlusive disease related to cardiovascular morbidity and mortality Alzamora, María Teresa Baena-Díez, José Miguel Sorribes, Marta Forés, Rosa Toran, Pere Vicheto, Marisa Pera, Guillem Reina, María Dolores Albaladejo, Carlos Llussà, Judith Bundó, Magda Sancho, Amparo Heras, Antonio Rubiés, Joan Arenillas, Juan Francisco BMC Public Health Study Protocol BACKGROUND: The early diagnosis of atherosclerotic disease is essential for developing preventive strategies in populations at high risk and acting when the disease is still asymptomatic. A low ankle-arm index (AAI) is a good marker of vascular events and may be diminished without presenting symptomatology (silent peripheral arterial disease). The aim of the PERART study (PERipheral ARTerial disease) is to determine the prevalence of peripheral arterial disease (both silent and symptomatic) in a general population of both sexes and determine its predictive value related to morbimortality (cohort study). METHODS/DESIGN: This cross-over, cohort study consists of 2 phases: firstly a descriptive, transversal cross-over study to determine the prevalence of peripheral arterial disease, and secondly, a cohort study to evaluate the predictive value of AAI in relation to cardiovascular morbimortality. From September 2006 to June 2007, a total of 3,010 patients over the age of 50 years will be randomly selected from a population adscribed to 24 healthcare centres in the province of Barcelona (Spain). The diagnostic criteria of peripheral arterial disease will be considered as an AAI < 0.90, determined by portable Doppler (8 Mhz probe) measured twice by trained personnel. Cardiovascular risk will be calculated with the Framingham-Wilson tables, with Framingham calibrated by the REGICOR and SCORE groups. The subjects included will be evaluted every 6 months by telephone interview and the clnical history and death registries will be reviewed. The appearance of the following cardiovascular events will be considered as variables of response: transitory ischaemic accident, ictus, angina, myocardial infartction, symptomatic abdominal aneurysm and vascular mortality. DISCUSSION: In this study we hope to determine the prevalence of peripheral arterial disease, especially the silent forms, in the general population and establish its relationship with cardiovascular morbimortality. A low AAI may be a better marker of arterial disease than the classical cardiovascular risk factors and may, therefore, contribute to improving the predictive value of the equations of cardiovascular risk and thereby allowing optimisation of multifactorial treatment of atherosclerotic disease. BioMed Central 2007-12-11 /pmc/articles/PMC2241612/ /pubmed/18070367 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1471-2458-7-348 Text en Copyright © 2007 Alzamora et al; licensee BioMed Central Ltd. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0 This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License ( (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0) ), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Study Protocol
Alzamora, María Teresa
Baena-Díez, José Miguel
Sorribes, Marta
Forés, Rosa
Toran, Pere
Vicheto, Marisa
Pera, Guillem
Reina, María Dolores
Albaladejo, Carlos
Llussà, Judith
Bundó, Magda
Sancho, Amparo
Heras, Antonio
Rubiés, Joan
Arenillas, Juan Francisco
Peripheral Arterial Disease Study (PERART): Prevalence and predictive values of asymptomatic peripheral arterial occlusive disease related to cardiovascular morbidity and mortality
title Peripheral Arterial Disease Study (PERART): Prevalence and predictive values of asymptomatic peripheral arterial occlusive disease related to cardiovascular morbidity and mortality
title_full Peripheral Arterial Disease Study (PERART): Prevalence and predictive values of asymptomatic peripheral arterial occlusive disease related to cardiovascular morbidity and mortality
title_fullStr Peripheral Arterial Disease Study (PERART): Prevalence and predictive values of asymptomatic peripheral arterial occlusive disease related to cardiovascular morbidity and mortality
title_full_unstemmed Peripheral Arterial Disease Study (PERART): Prevalence and predictive values of asymptomatic peripheral arterial occlusive disease related to cardiovascular morbidity and mortality
title_short Peripheral Arterial Disease Study (PERART): Prevalence and predictive values of asymptomatic peripheral arterial occlusive disease related to cardiovascular morbidity and mortality
title_sort peripheral arterial disease study (perart): prevalence and predictive values of asymptomatic peripheral arterial occlusive disease related to cardiovascular morbidity and mortality
topic Study Protocol
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2241612/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/18070367
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1471-2458-7-348
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