# A high burden of diabetes and ankle brachial index abnormalities exists in Mexican Americans in South Texas

**Authors:** Anand Prasad, Audrey C. Choh, Nelson D. Gonzalez, Marlene Garcia, Miryoung Lee, Gordon Watt, Liliana Maria Vasquez, Susan Laing, Shenghui Wu, Joseph B. McCormick, Susan Fisher-Hoch

PMC · DOI: 10.1016/j.pmedr.2024.102604 · 2024-01-09

## TL;DR

Mexican Americans in South Texas have a high rate of diabetes and abnormal ankle brachial index, indicating significant vascular issues.

## Contribution

The study identifies diabetes as a key risk factor for peripheral arterial disease in Mexican Americans using ankle brachial index measurements.

## Key findings

- 28.3% of participants had diabetes mellitus.
- 12.7% of participants had abnormal ABI-Low, indicating subclinical PAD.
- DM was significantly associated with abnormal ABI-High and TBI.

## Abstract

Ethnic differences exist in the United States in the interrelated problems of diabetes (DM), peripheral arterial disease (PAD), and leg amputations. The purpose of this study was to determine the prevalence and risk factor associations for subclinical PAD in a population sample of Mexican Americans using the ankle brachial (ABI) index.

The ABI-High (higher of the two ankle pressures/highest brachial pressure) and ABI-Low (lower of the two ankle pressures/highest brachial pressure) were calculated to define PAD. Toe brachial index (TBI) was also calculated. 746 participants were included with an age of 53.4 ± 0.9 years, 28.3 % had diabetes mellitus (DM), 12.6 % were smokers, and 51.2 % had hypertension (HTN). Using ABI-High ≤ 0.9, the prevalence of PAD was 2.7 %. This rose to 12.7 % when an ABI-Low ≤ 0.9 was used; 4.0 % of the population had an ABI-High > 1.4. The prevalence of TBI < 0.7 was 3.9 %. DM was a significant risk factor for ABI-High ≤ 0.9 and ABI-High > 1.4, and TBI < 0.7. Increased age, HTN, smoking was associated with ABI-High ≤ 0.9, while being male was associated with ABI-High > 1.4. Increased age, smoking, and lower education were all associated with abnormal TBI.

Despite relatively younger mean age than other studied Hispanic cohorts, the present population has a high burden of ABI abnormalities. DM was a consistent risk factor for PAD. These abnormalities indicate an important underlying substrate of vascular and metabolic disease that may predispose this population to the development of symptomatic PAD and incident amputations.

## Linked entities

- **Diseases:** diabetes mellitus (MONDO:0005015), peripheral arterial disease (MONDO:0005386)

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** PAD (MESH:D058729), vascular and metabolic disease (MESH:D014652), ABI abnormalities (MESH:D012021), smoking (MESH:D015208), HTN (MESH:D006973), DM (MESH:D003920)

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC10874877