Analysis of clinical and epidemiological indicators of peripheral artery disease in patients living in close vicinity of uranium legacy sites

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The article presents results of clinical and epidemiological analysis of medical records of patients lived in the vicinity of uranium legacy sites and suffered from peripheral artery disease. The records of 474 patients were examined, 40 of the patients were included in the main group. The control groups 1 and 2 contained 434 patients lived in conditionally "clean" sites, free of waste deposited in low and middle altitude sites. The results demonstrate prevalence of multilevel occlusive lesions of the arteries of the lower extremities group with involvement in the pathological process and distal segments of the vessels (OR=6.26; c2=24.92 and OR=5.56; c2=16.7; p0.05) indirectly points to the exertion of altitude adaptation mechanisms in patients living in radionuclide-free (OR=5.38; c2=14.22; p0.05) in the main group exceeded the number in other groups under study allows making suggestion that there were lesions on arterial walls in the main group patients. Femoral-anterior-tibial bypass surgery was implemented more frequently (OR=2.73, c2=5.49, p=0.02; OR=5.35, c2=9.09, p=0.003) in patients of the main group, this fact can be considered as the further confirmation of the presence of damage to the distal parts of the vessels. Based on the study analysis, one can draw conclusion that peripheral artery disease had specific pathogenesis and clinical features in the patients lived in the vicinity of radioactive waste storage sites with standard levels of radiation background and mountain climate.

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Clinical epidemiology, uranium legacy, radionuclides, mountain adaptation, cardiovascular system, peripheral artery disease, skeletal muscles, lower limb arteries, femoral-popliteal segment, chronic lower limb ischemia, critical ischemia, intermittent claudication

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Короткий адрес: https://sciup.org/170179213

IDR: 170179213   |   DOI: 10.21870/0131-3878-2021-30-2-146-158

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