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      Drug-Eluting Resorbable Scaffold versus Angioplasty for Infrapopliteal Artery Disease

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          Is Open Access

          Global, regional, and national prevalence and risk factors for peripheral artery disease in 2015: an updated systematic review and analysis

          Peripheral artery disease is a major cardiovascular disease that affected 202 million people worldwide in 2010. In the past decade, new epidemiological data on peripheral artery disease have emerged, enabling us to provide updated estimates of the prevalence and risk factors for peripheral artery disease globally and regionally and, for the first time, nationally.
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            Ethnic-specific prevalence of peripheral arterial disease in the United States.

            Individuals diagnosed with peripheral arterial disease (PAD) are at increased risk for future functional limitations as well as cardiovascular morbidity and mortality. The aim of this study was to estimate the age-, gender-, and ethnic-specific burden of PAD in the United States for the year 2000. Data were collected from seven community-based studies that assessed subjects for the presence of PAD using the ankle-brachial index (ABI). Using standardized weighting criteria, age-, gender-, and ethnic-specific prevalence rates were computed and then multiplied by the corresponding 2000 Census population totals to estimate the burden of PAD in the United States for that year. Evidence-based adjustments for studies which did not consider possible subclavian stenosis, prior revascularization for PAD, or both were employed. In 2000, it is conservatively estimated that at least 6.8 million (5.8%) individuals aged 40 years or older had PAD based on an ABI of less than 0.9 or previous revascularization for PAD, and that that there are an additional 1.7 million Americans with PAD but "normal" ABIs. Including this group gives a total of 8.5 million (7.2%) individuals with PAD. Roughly one in 16 individuals residing in the United States in 2000 who were aged 40 years and older had PAD. Clinicians are encouraged to screen for the presence of PAD using the ABI.
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              Surgery or Endovascular Therapy for Chronic Limb-Threatening Ischemia

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                Author and article information

                Contributors
                Journal
                New England Journal of Medicine
                N Engl J Med
                Massachusetts Medical Society
                0028-4793
                1533-4406
                October 25 2023
                Affiliations
                [1 ]From the Prince of Wales Hospital and University of New South Wales, Randwick, Australia (R.L.V.); New York Presbyterian–Weill Cornell Medical Center (B.G.D.), Mount Sinai Hospital (P.K.), and Columbia University Irving Medical Center and Columbia Vagelos College of Physicians and Surgeons (D.R.B., S.A.P.), New York, and Catholic Health Services, St. Francis Hospital and Heart Center, Roslyn (L.A.G.) — all in New York; Syntropic Core Lab and OhioHealth Heart and Vascular, Columbus (R.K.), and University...
                Article
                10.1056/NEJMoa2305637
                37888915
                51271a49-2422-48e3-bb30-f3f29cd86d8e
                © 2023

                http://www.nejmgroup.org/legal/terms-of-use.htm

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