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   Relationship between peripheral arterial disease and incident disability among elderly Japanese: the Tsurugaya project  
   
نویسنده nitta a. ,hozawa a. ,kuriyama s. ,nakaya n. ,ohmori-matsuda k. ,sone t. ,kakizaki m. ,ebihara s. ,ichiki m. ,arai h. ,tsuji i.
منبع journal of atherosclerosis and thrombosis - 2010 - دوره : 17 - شماره : 12 - صفحه:1290 -1296
چکیده    Aim: the aim of this study was to investigate whether peripheral arterial disease (pad) is predictive of disability and whether the relationship between pad and disability can be fully explained by baseline physical functions. methods: we followed for five years 783 japanese aged 70 years or older without a disability at baseline in 2003. we defined participants certificed as requiring long-term care as having incident disability. the hazard ratio (hr) and 95% confidence interval (95% ci) for incident disability were calculated using the cox proportional hazards model. results: after adjusting for possible confounders other than physical function,the hr of incident disability among participants with pad was 1.86 (95%ci: 1.06 to 3.26). although the risk was attenuated (hr= 1.63,95%ci: 0.92 to 2.86) after adding baseline physical function as a covariate,the hr was still high. furthermore,the relation was not statistically significant,but the group with higher physical function and pad also had a higher hr of incident disability than those who had higher physical function without pad. conclusion: pad is an important predictor of disability even if the level of baseline physical function is high.
کلیدواژه Incident disability; Japanese elderly prospective cohort study; Long term care insurance certification; Peripheral arterial disease
آدرس division of epidemiology,department of public health and forensic medicine,tohoku university graduate school of medicine,sendai,japan,department of geriatrics and gerontology division of brain sciences institute of development,aging and cancer tohoku university,sendai, Japan, division of epidemiology,department of public health and forensic medicine,tohoku university graduate school of medicine,sendai,japan,department of public health,yamagata university graduate school of medical science,yamagata, Japan, division of epidemiology,department of public health and forensic medicine,tohoku university graduate school of medicine,sendai, Japan, division of epidemiology,department of public health and forensic medicine,tohoku university graduate school of medicine,sendai,japan,department of nutrition and dietetics,faculty of family and consumer sciences,kamakura women's university,kamakura, Japan, division of epidemiology,department of public health and forensic medicine,tohoku university graduate school of medicine,sendai, Japan, division of epidemiology,department of public health and forensic medicine,tohoku university graduate school of medicine,sendai, Japan, division of epidemiology,department of public health and forensic medicine,tohoku university graduate school of medicine,sendai, Japan, department of internal medicine and rehabilitation science,tohoku university graduate school of medicine,sendai, Japan, jr sendai hospital,sendai, Japan, department of geriatrics and gerontology division of brain sciences institute of development,aging and cancer tohoku university,sendai, Japan, division of epidemiology,department of public health and forensic medicine,tohoku university graduate school of medicine,sendai, Japan
 
     
   
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