Abstract

A case-control study concerning peripheral arterial occlusive disease (PAOD) was conducted in Athens, Greece. The case series consisted of 100 patients with PAOD as principle diagnosis admitted consecutively to a major teaching hospital in Athens during an 18-month period. The controls were patients hospitalized in the same hospital during the same period as the index cases for conditions requiring minor surgical care. All cases and controls were interviewed by the same person about several socioeconomic, demographic and medical variables; blood pressure and blood glucose values were also recorded. Data were analysed using multiple logistic regression procedures, controlling for age, sex and years of schooling. Tobacco smoking, systolic blood pressure, diabetes mellitus, heavy alcohol drinking and excessive coffee consumption were all strong independent risk factors with eight-fold or more differences in risk. It appears that PAOD as an atherosclerotic disease with low short-term fatality reveals in more contrasting terms the aetiological importance of factors involved in the atherosclerotic process as compared to atherosclerotic conditions with higher short-term fatality like coronary heart disease (CHD) which may also have stronger thrombotic components.

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