Exercise Oximetry Correlates Better With Exercise-Induced Lactate Increase, than Ankle Brachial Index or Walking Time, in Vascular Claudicants

Author:

Semporé Wendsèndaté Yves12ORCID,Hersant Jeanne23,Ramondou Pierre23,Hamel Jean François4,Abraham Pierre235ORCID,Henni Samir3

Affiliation:

1. Centre MURAZ, National Institute of Public Health, Bobo Dioulasso, Burkina Faso

2. MitoVasc Institute UMR CNRS 6015 / INSERM 1083, Angers, France

3. Vascular Medicine, University Hospital of Angers, Pays de la Loire, France

4. Department of Biostatistics, University Hospital of Angers, Pays de la Loire, France

5. Sports Medicine, University Hospital of Angers, Pays de la Loire, France

Abstract

In claudication, the correlation between walking-induced biomarkers and indices of clinical severity (e.g., walking distance or ankle brachial index (ABI)), is fair. We hypothesized that a correlation would be observed between the clinical estimation of ischemia severity with exercise transcutaneous oximetry (Ex-TcpO2) and lactate increase. A prospective study was performed among 377 patients with arterial claudication. We recorded age, sex, ABI, body mass index (BMI), systolic arterial blood pressure (SBP), and glycemia. Capillary blood lactate was measured at rest and 3 min after a constant load treadmill test. We recorded maximum walking time (MWT), heart rate (HRmax), the sum of minimal decrease from oxygen values for buttocks, thighs and calves Ex-TcpO2 (DROPmin), as well as the amplitude of chest-TcpO2 decrease. A multilinear regression model was used to assess the variables associated with lactate increase. BMI, SBP, HRmax, the amplitude of decrease in chest-TcpO2 and DROPmin, but not age, sex, ABI, MWT, diabetes mellitus nor glycemia, were significantly associated to lactate increase in the model. Because it accounts for the severity and diffusion of lower-limb exercise-induced ischemia and detects exercise induced hypoxemia, TcpO2 may be preferable to ABI or MWT to estimate the metabolic consequences of walking in claudicants.

Funder

ASTRA-ZENECA

ORTEC

PFIZER

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine

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