Journal of Clinical Medicine (Nov 2020)

Systemic Disease and Ocular Comorbidity Analysis of Geographically Isolated Federally Recognized American Indian Tribes of the Intermountain West

  • Patrice M. Hicks,
  • Benjamin Haaland,
  • Michael Feehan,
  • Alan S. Crandall,
  • Jeff H. Pettey,
  • Elizabeth Nuttall,
  • William Self,
  • Mary Elizabeth Hartnett,
  • Paul Bernstein,
  • Albert Vitale,
  • Akbar Shakoor,
  • Julia P. Shulman,
  • Sandra F. Sieminski,
  • Ivana Kim,
  • Leah A. Owen,
  • Maureen A. Murtaugh,
  • Albert Noyes,
  • Margaret M. DeAngelis

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/jcm9113590
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 9, no. 11
p. 3590

Abstract

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Background: The American Indian Navajo and Goshute peoples are underserved patient populations residing in the Four Corners area of the United States and Ibupah, Utah, respectively. Methods: We conducted a cross-sectional study of epidemiological factors and lipid biomarkers that may be associated with type II diabetes, hypertension and retinal manifestations in tribal and non-tribal members in the study areas (n = 146 participants). We performed multivariate analyses to determine which, if any, risk factors were unique at the tribal level. Fundus photos and epidemiological data through standardized questionnaires were collected. Blood samples were collected to analyze lipid biomarkers. Univariate analyses were conducted and statistically significant factors at p p p = 0.022), residing in the Four Corners (p = 0.027) and having hypertension (p p p = 0.002) were significantly associated with hypertension in both populations examined. When retinopathy was evaluated for both populations combined, hypertension (p = 0.037) and living in Ibupah (p p < 0.001). No lipid biomarkers were found to be significantly associated with any disease state. Conclusions: We found different comorbid factors with retinal disease outcome between the two tribes that reside within the Intermountain West. This is indicated by the association of tribe and with the type of retinopathy outcome when we combined the populations of American Indians. Overall, the Navajo peoples and the Four Corners had a higher prevalence of chronic disease that included diabetes and hypertension than the Goshutes and Ibupah. To the best of our knowledge, this is the first study to conduct an analysis for disease outcomes exclusively including the Navajo and Goshute tribe of the Intermountain West.

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