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Prevalence of severe arteriosclerosis obliterans in patients with diabetes mellitus. Relation to smoking and form of therapy.
Author(s) -
Kirk W. Beach,
John D. Brunzell,
D. Eugene Strandness
Publication year - 1982
Publication title -
arteriosclerosis an official journal of the american heart association inc
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2330-9180
pISSN - 0276-5047
DOI - 10.1161/01.atv.2.4.275
Subject(s) - arteriosclerosis obliterans , medicine , diabetes mellitus , arteriosclerosis , cardiology , blood pressure , disease , gastroenterology , endocrinology
Noninvasive methods were used to determine the prevalence and severity of arteriosclerosis obliterans associated with diabetes in 674 subjects including 153 recruited as controls. A resting ankle systolic blood pressure that was less than 90% of the arm pressure indicated severe arteriosclerosis obliterans. Of the 71 subjects with severe disease, 64 (90%) had a history of smoking, which is significantly greater than the 60% overall smoking rate (p less than 0.001). In non-insulin-dependent diabetic smokers, the diet-treated subjects had 2.5 times the prevalence of severe arteriosclerosis obliterans as those treated with insulin (p = 0.01); the sulfonylurea-treated subjects had twice the prevalence of severe disease as those treated with insulin (p = 0.015).

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