Angina and intermittent claudication in 7403 participants of the 2003 Scottish Health Survey: impact on general and mental health, quality of life and five-year mortality
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Date
2013
Authors
Inglis, S.C.
Lewsey, J.D.
Lowe, G.D.O.
Jhund, P.
Gillies, M.
Stewart, S.
Capewell, S.
Macintyre, K.
McMurray, J.J.V.
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International Journal of Cardiology, 2013; 167(5):2149-2155
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Sally C. Inglis, James D. Lewsey, Gordon D.O. Lowe, Pardeep Jhund, Michelle Gillies, Simon Stewart, Simon Capewell, Kate MacIntyre, John J.V. McMurray
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Abstract
Background: Angina and intermittent claudication impair function and mobility and reduce health-related quality of life. Both symptoms have similar etiology, yet the physical and psychological impacts of these symptoms are rarely studied in community-based cohorts or in individuals with isolated symptoms. Methods: The 2003 Scottish Health Survey was a cross-sectional survey which enrolled a random sample of individuals aged 16-95 years living in Scotland. The Rose Angina Questionnaire, the Edinburgh Claudication Questionnaire, the Short Form-12 (SF-12) and the General Health Questionnaire were completed. Self-assessed general health was reported. Survey results were linked to national death records and mortality at five years was calculated. Subjects with isolated angina or intermittent claudication and neither symptom were compared (22 participants with both symptoms were excluded); 7403 participants (aged ≥ 16 years) were included. Results: Participants with angina (n=205; 60 ± 15 years; 45% male) rated their general health worse and were more likely to have a potential mental-health problem than those with intermittent claudication (n=173; 61 ± 15 years; 41% male). Mean (standard deviation) physical and mental component scores on the SF-12 were higher for participants with intermittent claudication relative to those with angina (physical component score: 42.3 (10.6) vs. 35.0 (11.7), p<0.001; mental component score: 52.3 (8.5) vs. 46.5 (11.7), p=0.001). There was an observed absolute difference in five-year mortality of 4.8% (angina 12.3%, 95% CI 8.5-17.6; intermittent claudication 7.5%, 95% CI 4.4-12.6) although not statistically significant (p=0.16). Conclusions: Both intermittent claudication and angina adversely impact general and mental health and survival, even in a relatively young, community-based cohort.
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© 2012 Elsevier Ireland Ltd. Open access under CC BY license.