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Determination of the Pressure Drop Across an Arterial Stenosis Utilizing Angiocinedensitometry

A method is presented for an evaluation of the hemodynamic significance of a stenotic lesion in the arterial tree. Twenty-three patients were examined with arteriosclerosis obliterans and intermittent claudication of the same severity. Flow velocity data obtained by angiodensitometry and viscosity v...

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Autores principales: Itzchak, Yacov, Silberberg, Alexander, Adar, Raphael, Deutsch, Victor
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: 1977
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2595533/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/906556
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author Itzchak, Yacov
Silberberg, Alexander
Adar, Raphael
Deutsch, Victor
author_facet Itzchak, Yacov
Silberberg, Alexander
Adar, Raphael
Deutsch, Victor
author_sort Itzchak, Yacov
collection PubMed
description A method is presented for an evaluation of the hemodynamic significance of a stenotic lesion in the arterial tree. Twenty-three patients were examined with arteriosclerosis obliterans and intermittent claudication of the same severity. Flow velocity data obtained by angiodensitometry and viscosity values calculated from the hematocrit were inserted into the Poiseuille's flow formula to obtain the pressure drop across a stenotic lesion in the left external iliac artery. By the same way, the pressure gradient was calculated in 33 “normal” subjects. The normal pressure gradient along the external iliac artery varied between 23 to 110 dynes/cm(2) (52 ± 24 dynes/cm(2) for mean and S.d), and the normal resistance to flow was 6.08 ± 4.1 dyne sec/cm(5)). Stenotic lesions of similar dimensions gave widely varying pressure drops (114-4,736 dynes/cm(2)) (mean and S.d 1,309 ± 1,224 dynes/cm(2)) indicating a difference in the hemodynamic significance of the various lesions. These values were significantly different (p(t) < 0.001) from the normal values. The resistance across these stenotic lesions ranged between 21 to 768 dyne sec/cm(5) (196 ± 192 dyne sec/cm(5)) for the mean and S.d and this was significantly different from the normal group; p(t) < 0.001. Direct measurement of blood viscosity coupled with angiocinedensitometry at rest and after forced vasodilatation should provide an accurate means of determining the relative significance of a stenotic lesion and distal vessel disease in a given patient on blood flow to the leg.
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spelling pubmed-25955332008-12-05 Determination of the Pressure Drop Across an Arterial Stenosis Utilizing Angiocinedensitometry Itzchak, Yacov Silberberg, Alexander Adar, Raphael Deutsch, Victor Yale J Biol Med Original Contributions A method is presented for an evaluation of the hemodynamic significance of a stenotic lesion in the arterial tree. Twenty-three patients were examined with arteriosclerosis obliterans and intermittent claudication of the same severity. Flow velocity data obtained by angiodensitometry and viscosity values calculated from the hematocrit were inserted into the Poiseuille's flow formula to obtain the pressure drop across a stenotic lesion in the left external iliac artery. By the same way, the pressure gradient was calculated in 33 “normal” subjects. The normal pressure gradient along the external iliac artery varied between 23 to 110 dynes/cm(2) (52 ± 24 dynes/cm(2) for mean and S.d), and the normal resistance to flow was 6.08 ± 4.1 dyne sec/cm(5)). Stenotic lesions of similar dimensions gave widely varying pressure drops (114-4,736 dynes/cm(2)) (mean and S.d 1,309 ± 1,224 dynes/cm(2)) indicating a difference in the hemodynamic significance of the various lesions. These values were significantly different (p(t) < 0.001) from the normal values. The resistance across these stenotic lesions ranged between 21 to 768 dyne sec/cm(5) (196 ± 192 dyne sec/cm(5)) for the mean and S.d and this was significantly different from the normal group; p(t) < 0.001. Direct measurement of blood viscosity coupled with angiocinedensitometry at rest and after forced vasodilatation should provide an accurate means of determining the relative significance of a stenotic lesion and distal vessel disease in a given patient on blood flow to the leg. 1977 /pmc/articles/PMC2595533/ /pubmed/906556 Text en
spellingShingle Original Contributions
Itzchak, Yacov
Silberberg, Alexander
Adar, Raphael
Deutsch, Victor
Determination of the Pressure Drop Across an Arterial Stenosis Utilizing Angiocinedensitometry
title Determination of the Pressure Drop Across an Arterial Stenosis Utilizing Angiocinedensitometry
title_full Determination of the Pressure Drop Across an Arterial Stenosis Utilizing Angiocinedensitometry
title_fullStr Determination of the Pressure Drop Across an Arterial Stenosis Utilizing Angiocinedensitometry
title_full_unstemmed Determination of the Pressure Drop Across an Arterial Stenosis Utilizing Angiocinedensitometry
title_short Determination of the Pressure Drop Across an Arterial Stenosis Utilizing Angiocinedensitometry
title_sort determination of the pressure drop across an arterial stenosis utilizing angiocinedensitometry
topic Original Contributions
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2595533/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/906556
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