Biomarkers of Inflammation and Thrombosis as Predictors of Near-Term Mortality in Patients with Peripheral Arterial Disease: A Cohort Study

Appendix Figure 2.
Appendix Figure 2. Trajectories of serum amyloid A levels over time in persons with peripheral arterial disease.

The points in the survivor figure represent serum amyloid A levels in participants who survived during the following year. These individual serum amyloid A values are connected to show the trajectory of serum amyloid A levels over time in a randomly selected subset of participants who survived the 4-year follow-up. The open circles in the decedent figure represent serum amyloid A levels in participants who died during the year after serum amyloid A measurement. Individual serum amyloid A values are connected to show the trajectory of serum amyloid A levels at each visit in a randomly selected subset of participants who died during the 4-year follow-up. The boxes in each figure (survivors and decedents) represent mean serum amyloid A values for those who survived and died during the year after the measurement, respectively.

This Article

  1. Ann Intern Med January 15, 2008 vol. 148 no. 2 85-93