Publication: Rehabilitative Exercise Reduced the Impact of Peripheral Artery Disease on Vascular Outcomes in Elderly Patients with Claudication: A Three-Year Single Center Retrospective Study.
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Identifiers
Date
2019-02-06
Authors
Manfredini, Fabio
Lamberti, Nicola
Guerzoni, Franco
Napoli, Nicola
Gasbarro, Vincenzo
Zamboni, Paolo
Mascoli, Francesco
Manfredini, Roberto
Basaglia, Nino
Rodriguez-Borrego, Maria Aurora
Advisors
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
MDPI
Abstract
The study retrospectively evaluated the association between rehabilitative outcomes and risk of peripheral revascularizations in elderly peripheral artery disease (PAD) patients with claudication. Eight-hundred thirty-five patients were enrolled. Ankle-brachial index (ABI) and maximal walking speed (Smax) were measured at baseline and at discharge from a structured home-based rehabilitation program. For the analysis, patients were divided according to a baseline ABI value (severe: ≤0.5; moderate: ≥0.5) and according to hemodynamic or functional rehabilitative response (responder: ABI ≥0.10 and/or Smax >0.5 km/h). Three-year outcomes were collected from the regional registry. According to the inclusion criteria (age 60⁻80, ABI 0.5 km/h). Three-year outcomes were collected from the regional registry. According to the inclusion criteria (age 60⁻80, ABI < 0.80; program completion) 457 patients, 146 severe and 311 moderate, were studied. The whole population showed significant functional and hemodynamic improvements at discharge, with 56 revascularizations and 69 deaths at follow-up. Compared to the moderate group, the severe group showed a higher rate of revascularizations (17% vs. 10%, p < 0.001) and deaths (29% and 8%, respectively; p < 0.001).
However, patients with severe PAD who were ABI responders after rehabilitation showed less revascularizations than non-responders (13% vs. 21%; hazard ratio (HR): 0.52) and were not different from patients with moderate disease (9%). Superimposable rates were observed for Smax responders (13% vs. 21%; HR: 0.55; moderate 10%). In conclusion, elderly patients with severe PAD empowered by better rehabilitation outcomes showed lower rates of peripheral revascularizations and deaths that were comparable to patients with moderate PAD
Description
MeSH Terms
Aged
Ankle Brachial Index
Patient Discharge
Intermittent Claudication
Peripheral Arterial Disease
Hemodynamics
Registries
Ankle Brachial Index
Patient Discharge
Intermittent Claudication
Peripheral Arterial Disease
Hemodynamics
Registries
DeCS Terms
Alta del paciente
Claudicación intermitente
Enfermedad arterial periférica
Hemodinámica
Sistema de registros
Índice tobillo braquial
Claudicación intermitente
Enfermedad arterial periférica
Hemodinámica
Sistema de registros
Índice tobillo braquial
CIE Terms
Keywords
Exercise, Mortality, Peripheral artery disease, Rehabilitation, Vascular surgical procedures
Citation
Manfredini F, Lamberti N, Guerzoni F, Napoli N, Gasbarro V, Zamboni P, et al. Rehabilitative Exercise Reduced the Impact of Peripheral Artery Disease on Vascular Outcomes in Elderly Patients with Claudication: A Three-Year Single Center Retrospective Study. J Clin Med. 2019 Feb 7;8(2):210