Garg Parveen K, Tian Lu, Criqui Michael H, Liu Kiang, Ferrucci Luigi, Guralnik Jack M, Tan Jin, McDermott Mary M
New York University School of Medicine, New York City, NY, USA.
Circulation. 2006 Jul 18;114(3):242-8. doi: 10.1161/CIRCULATIONAHA.105.605246. Epub 2006 Jul 3.
We determined whether patients with lower-extremity peripheral arterial disease (PAD) who are more physically active during daily life have lower mortality rates than PAD patients who are less active.
Participants were 460 men and women with PAD (mean age 71.9+/-8.4 years) followed up for 57 months (interquartile range 36.6 to 61.9 months). At baseline, participants were interviewed about their physical activity. Vertical accelerometers measured physical activity continuously over 7 days in 225 participants. Analyses were adjusted for age, sex, race, body mass index, hypertension, smoking, comorbidities, total cholesterol, HDL cholesterol, leg symptoms, and ankle-brachial index. At 57-month follow-up, 134 participants (29%) had died, including 75 participants (33%) who wore accelerometers. Higher baseline physical activity levels measured by vertical accelerometer were associated with lower all-cause mortality (P(trend)=0.003). Relative to PAD participants in the highest quartile of accelerometer-measured physical activity, those in the lowest quartile had higher total mortality (hazard ratio 3.48, 95% confidence interval 1.23 to 9.87, P=0.019). Similar results were observed for the combined outcome of cardiovascular events or cardiovascular mortality (P(trend)=0.005). Higher numbers of stair flights climbed during 1 week were associated with lower total mortality (P(trend)=0.035).
PAD patients with higher physical activity during daily life have reduced mortality and cardiovascular events compared with PAD patients with the lowest physical activity, independent of confounders. Further study is needed to determine whether interventions that increase physical activity during daily life are associated with improved survival in patients with PAD.
我们确定在日常生活中身体活动较多的下肢外周动脉疾病(PAD)患者的死亡率是否低于活动较少的PAD患者。
参与者为460名患有PAD的男性和女性(平均年龄71.9±8.4岁),随访57个月(四分位间距为36.6至61.9个月)。在基线时,对参与者进行了关于其身体活动的访谈。垂直加速度计在225名参与者中连续7天测量身体活动。分析针对年龄、性别、种族、体重指数、高血压、吸烟、合并症、总胆固醇、高密度脂蛋白胆固醇、腿部症状和踝臂指数进行了校正。在57个月的随访中,134名参与者(29%)死亡,其中包括75名佩戴加速度计的参与者(33%)。通过垂直加速度计测量的较高基线身体活动水平与较低的全因死亡率相关(P趋势=0.003)。相对于加速度计测量的身体活动处于最高四分位数的PAD参与者,处于最低四分位数的参与者总死亡率更高(风险比3.48,95%置信区间1.23至9.87,P=0.019)。对于心血管事件或心血管死亡率的综合结果,观察到了类似的结果(P趋势=0.005)。1周内爬楼梯的次数较多与较低的总死亡率相关(P趋势=0.035)。
与身体活动最少的PAD患者相比,日常生活中身体活动较多的PAD患者死亡率和心血管事件有所降低,且不受混杂因素影响。需要进一步研究以确定增加日常生活中身体活动的干预措施是否与PAD患者生存率的提高相关。