Wierzchowski Paweł, Dereziński Tadeusz, Migdalski Arkadiusz, Woda Łukasz, Wąsikowska Beata, Jakubowski Grzegorz, Jawień Arkadiusz
Clinic of Vascular Surgery and Angiology, Collegium Medicum of Nicolaus Copernicus University, Bydgoszcz, Poland.
Kardiol Pol. 2017;75(5):486-494. doi: 10.5603/KP.a2017.0016. Epub 2017 Feb 2.
The incidence of peripheral artery disease (PAD) and cardiovascular (CV) events in the female population has been on the increase.
To analyse the risk factors of a CV event and PAD in women and to assess the usefulness of the ankle-brachial index (ABI).
Evaluation of selected parameters in a cohort of 365 women living in the same district. The following data were prospectively recorded: weight, height, waist size, hip circumference, smoking, the intima-media complex, ABI value, and laboratory results. PAD symptoms, CV events and neurological events were noted. ABI was analysed assuming pathology for values: ≤ 0.9 or ≤ 1.0.
Age, plasma glucose level, atrial fibrillation, and nicotine addiction were correlated independently with CV disease and stroke (p < 0.001). The high-density lipoprotein cholesterol level, height, and systolic blood pressure were correlated independently with ABI values (p < 0.05). There was no correlation between the occurrence of a CV event in the past and the ABI, irrespective of the cut-off point for the reference value (p = NS).
There is no evidence that stricter criteria for the assessment of ABI better represent the vascular status in the female population.