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Discordant Diagnosis of Lower Extremity Peripheral Artery Disease Using American Heart Association Postexercise Guidelines. | LitMetric

Discordant Diagnosis of Lower Extremity Peripheral Artery Disease Using American Heart Association Postexercise Guidelines.

Medicine (Baltimore)

From the Gonda Vascular Center, Mayo Clinic, Rochester, Minnesota, USA (GM, AWP, DAL, KPC, CMC, TWR, PWW); and LUNAM University, Inserm 1083/CNRS 6214, Faculty of Medicine, Angers, France (GM); and INSERM Clinical Investigation Center CIC 1414, F-35043 Rennes, France (GM).

Published: August 2015

AI Article Synopsis

  • A study aimed to evaluate whether the postexercise criteria for diagnosing peripheral artery disease (PAD), recommended by the American Heart Association, consistently identify the same patients as the resting ankle-brachial index (ABI) method.
  • Out of 31,663 patients analyzed, 35% were diagnosed with PAD based on their resting ABI, with notable variations in agreement among clinicians using postexercise criteria to diagnose PAD.
  • The findings suggest that using postexercise criteria does not reliably pinpoint the same group of PAD patients, indicating a need for further research to improve the diagnostic process.

Article Abstract

To determine whether postexercise criteria for peripheral artery disease (PAD) diagnosis recommended by the American Heart Association (AHA) identifies the same group of PAD patients.Diagnosis of PAD is performed using ankle-brachial index at rest (resting-ABI). When resting-ABI is not contributive, an AHA scientific statement recommend to use 1 of 2 following criteria: a postexercise ABI decrease of greater than 20% or a postexercise ankle pressure decrease of greater than 30 mm Hg.Between 1996 and 2012, 31,663 consecutive patients underwent lower-extremity arterial study at Mayo Clinic. Among them, only unique patients who had exercise treadmill testing were analyzed. In this retrospective analysis, resting-ABI, postexercise ABI, and postexercise decrease of ankle pressure measured at 1-minute were measured in each patient. We conducted an analysis of agreement between postexercise criteria expressing the agreement separately for the positive and the negative ratings. Twelve thousand three hundred twelve consecutive patients were studied with a mean age of 67 ± 12 years, 61% male. According to resting-ABI, 4317 (35%) patients had PAD. In the whole population, if a clinician diagnoses "PAD" with 1 postexercise criterion, the probability that other clinicians would also diagnose "PAD" is 74.3%. If a clinician diagnoses "no PAD", the probability that other clinicians would also diagnose "no PAD" is 82.4%. In the patients to be of potential benefit from treadmill test when the resting-ABI > 0.90, if a clinician diagnoses "PAD" with 1 postexercise criterion, the probability that other clinicians would also diagnose "PAD" is 58.4% whereas if a clinician diagnoses "no PAD," the probability that other clinicians would also diagnose "no PAD" is 87.5%.Postexercise criteria do not identify the same group of PAD patients. In our opinion, postexercise criteria to define PAD deserve additional study.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4616614PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1097/MD.0000000000001277DOI Listing

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