Clinics (Dec 2013)

Ankle-brachial index as a predictor of coronary disease events in elderly patients submitted to coronary angiography

  • Eduardo D. E. Papa,
  • Izo Helber,
  • Manes R. Ehrlichmann,
  • Claudia Maria Rodrigues Alves,
  • Marcia Makdisse,
  • Livia N. Matos,
  • Jairo Lins Borges,
  • Renato D. Lopes,
  • Edson Stefanini,
  • Antonio Carlos Carvalho

DOI
https://doi.org/10.6061/clinics/2013(12)02
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 68, no. 12
pp. 1481 – 1487

Abstract

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OBJECTIVES: To correlate the importance of the ankle-brachial index in terms of cardiovascular morbimortality and the extent of coronary arterial disease amongst elderly patients without clinical manifestations of lower limb peripheral arterial disease. METHODS: We analyzed prospective data from 100 patients over 65 years of age with coronary arterial disease, as confirmed by coronary angiography, and with over 70% stenosis of at least one sub-epicardial coronary artery. We measured the ankle-brachial index immediately after coronary angiography, and a value of <0.9 was used to diagnose peripheral arterial disease. RESULTS: The patients' average age was 77.4 years. The most prevalent risk factor was hypertension (96%), and the median late follow-up appointment was 28.9 months. The ankle-brachial index was <0.9 in 47% of the patients, and a low index was more prevalent in patients with multiarterial coronary disease compared to patients with uniarterial disease in the same group. Using a bivariate analysis, only an ankle-brachial index of <0.9 was a strong predictive factor for cardiovascular events, thereby increasing all-cause deaths and fatal and non-fatal acute myocardial infarctions two- to three-fold. CONCLUSION: In elderly patients with documented coronary disease, a low ankle-brachial index (<0.9) was associated with the severity and extent of coronary arterial disease, and in late follow-up appointments, a low index was correlated with an increase in the occurrence of major cardiovascular events.

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