Age and history of cardiac disease as risk factors for cardiac complications after peripheral vascular surgery in diabetic patients
- PMID: 11155410
- DOI: 10.4065/76.1.34
Age and history of cardiac disease as risk factors for cardiac complications after peripheral vascular surgery in diabetic patients
Abstract
Objective: To examine the relationship of age and clinical factors to postoperative cardiovascular events in a cohort of diabetic patients undergoing peripheral vascular surgery.
Patients and methods: In this cohort study, 316 diabetic patients were followed up prospectively after femoral-to-distal artery bypass surgery. The major end points of the study were all-cause mortality and cardiac morbidity (cardiac events defined as nonfatal myocardial infarction, unstable angina, and congestive heart failure).
Results: The overall postoperative cardiac event rate was 17.1% (54/316), with a 7.6% (24/316) rate of postoperative death or nonfatal myocardial infarction. Older diabetic patients (> or = 65 years) had a complication rate of 19.9% (43/216) compared with an 11.0% (11/100) complication rate in younger diabetic patients (< 65 years) (P = .02). Younger diabetic patients with a clinical history of coronary artery disease had an event rate of 18.2% (39/216) compared with an event rate of 2.4% (1/42) in younger diabetic patients without known cardiac disease (P = .02). In contrast, event rates were similar (20.7% [150/208] vs 18.2% [66/108]) in older diabetic patients with or without prior evidence of cardiac disease.
Conclusion: Advanced age and clinical evidence of coronary artery disease are important determinants of postoperative outcome in diabetic patients undergoing peripheral vascular surgery.
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