Circulation Journal
Online ISSN : 1347-4820
Print ISSN : 1346-9843
ISSN-L : 1346-9843

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Impact of Peripheral Artery Disease on Prognosis in Hospitalized Heart Failure Patients
Yuichi NakamuraHiroyuki KuniiAkiomi YoshihisaMai TakiguchiTakeshi ShimizuHiroyuki YamauchiShoji IwayaTakashi OwadaSatoshi AbeTakamasa SatoSatoshi SuzukiMasayoshi OikawaAtsushi KobayashiTakayoshi YamakiKoichi SugimotoKazuhiko NakazatoHitoshi SuzukiShu-ichi SaitohYasuchika Takeishi
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Article ID: CJ-14-1280

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Abstract

Background:The impact of peripheral artery disease (PAD) on heart failure (HF) prognosis remains unclear.Methods and Results:A total of 388 consecutive decompensated HF patients were divided into 2 groups based on the presence of PAD: HF with PAD (PAD group, n=101, 26.0%) and HF without PAD (non-PAD group, n=287, 74.0%). We compared clinical features, echocardiographic parameters, cardiopulmonary exercise testing results, laboratory findings, as well as cardiac, non-cardiac, and all-cause mortality between the 2 groups. The PAD group, as compared with the non-PAD group, had (1) higher prevalence of coronary artery disease (40.6 vs. 27.5%, P=0.011) and cerebrovascular disease (34.7 vs. 18.2%, P=0.001); (2) higher tumor necrosis factor-α (1.82 vs. 1.49 pg/ml, P=0.023), C-reactive protein (0.32 vs. 0.19 mg/dl, P=0.045), and troponin T (0.039 vs. 0.021 ng/ml, P=0.019); (3) lower LVEF (42.4 vs. 48.5%, P<0.001); (4) lower peak V̇O2(13.4 vs. 15.9 ml·kg–1·min–1, P=0.001); and (5) higher V̇E/V̇CO2slope (38.8 vs. 33.7, P<0.001). On Kaplan-Meier analysis, cardiac, non-cardiac, and all-cause mortality were significantly higher in the PAD group than in the non-PAD group (P<0.05, respectively). On Cox proportional hazard analysis after adjusting for confounding factors, PAD was an independent predictor of cardiac and all-cause mortality (P<0.05, respectively) in HF patients.Conclusions:PAD was common and an independent predictor of cardiac and all-cause mortality in HF patients.

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© 2015 THE JAPANESE CIRCULATION SOCIETY
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