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Evaluation of forearm vascular resistance during orthostatic stress: Velocity is proportional to flow and size doesn’t matter

BACKGROUND: The upright posture imposes a significant challenge to blood pressure regulation that is compensated through baroreflex-mediated increases in heart rate and vascular resistance. Orthostatic cardiac responses are easily inferred from heart rate, but vascular resistance responses are harde...

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Autores principales: Claydon, V. E., Moore, J. P., Greene, E. R., Appenzeller, O., Hainsworth, R.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2019
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6857923/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31730662
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0224872
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author Claydon, V. E.
Moore, J. P.
Greene, E. R.
Appenzeller, O.
Hainsworth, R.
author_facet Claydon, V. E.
Moore, J. P.
Greene, E. R.
Appenzeller, O.
Hainsworth, R.
author_sort Claydon, V. E.
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: The upright posture imposes a significant challenge to blood pressure regulation that is compensated through baroreflex-mediated increases in heart rate and vascular resistance. Orthostatic cardiac responses are easily inferred from heart rate, but vascular resistance responses are harder to elucidate. One approach is to determine vascular resistance as arterial pressure/blood flow, where blood flow is inferred from ultrasound-based measurements of brachial blood velocity. This relies on the as yet unvalidated assumption that brachial artery diameter does not change during orthostatic stress, and so velocity is proportional to flow. It is also unknown whether the orthostatic vascular resistance response is related to initial blood vessel diameter. METHODS: We determined beat-to-beat heart rate (ECG), blood pressure (Portapres) and vascular resistance (Doppler ultrasound) during a combined orthostatic stress test (head-upright tilting and lower body negative pressure) continued until presyncope. Participants were 16 men (aged 38.4±2.3 years) who lived permanently at high altitude (4450m). RESULTS: The supine brachial diameter ranged from 2.9–5.6mm. Brachial diameter did not change during orthostatic stress (supine: 4.19±0.2mm; tilt: 4.20±0.2mm; -20mmHg lower body negative pressure: 4.19±0.2mm, p = 0.811). There was no significant correlation between supine brachial artery diameter and the maximum vascular resistance response (r = 0.323; p = 0.29). Forearm vascular resistance responses evaluated using brachial arterial flow and velocity were strongly correlated (r = 0.989, p<0.00001) and demonstrated high equivalency with minimal bias (-6.34±24.4%). DISCUSSION: During severe orthostatic stress the diameter of the brachial artery remains constant, supporting use of brachial velocity for accurate continuous non-invasive orthostatic vascular resistance responses. The magnitude of the orthostatic forearm vascular resistance response was unrelated to the baseline brachial arterial diameter, suggesting that upstream vessel size does not matter in the ability to mount a vasoconstrictor response to orthostasis.
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spelling pubmed-68579232019-12-07 Evaluation of forearm vascular resistance during orthostatic stress: Velocity is proportional to flow and size doesn’t matter Claydon, V. E. Moore, J. P. Greene, E. R. Appenzeller, O. Hainsworth, R. PLoS One Research Article BACKGROUND: The upright posture imposes a significant challenge to blood pressure regulation that is compensated through baroreflex-mediated increases in heart rate and vascular resistance. Orthostatic cardiac responses are easily inferred from heart rate, but vascular resistance responses are harder to elucidate. One approach is to determine vascular resistance as arterial pressure/blood flow, where blood flow is inferred from ultrasound-based measurements of brachial blood velocity. This relies on the as yet unvalidated assumption that brachial artery diameter does not change during orthostatic stress, and so velocity is proportional to flow. It is also unknown whether the orthostatic vascular resistance response is related to initial blood vessel diameter. METHODS: We determined beat-to-beat heart rate (ECG), blood pressure (Portapres) and vascular resistance (Doppler ultrasound) during a combined orthostatic stress test (head-upright tilting and lower body negative pressure) continued until presyncope. Participants were 16 men (aged 38.4±2.3 years) who lived permanently at high altitude (4450m). RESULTS: The supine brachial diameter ranged from 2.9–5.6mm. Brachial diameter did not change during orthostatic stress (supine: 4.19±0.2mm; tilt: 4.20±0.2mm; -20mmHg lower body negative pressure: 4.19±0.2mm, p = 0.811). There was no significant correlation between supine brachial artery diameter and the maximum vascular resistance response (r = 0.323; p = 0.29). Forearm vascular resistance responses evaluated using brachial arterial flow and velocity were strongly correlated (r = 0.989, p<0.00001) and demonstrated high equivalency with minimal bias (-6.34±24.4%). DISCUSSION: During severe orthostatic stress the diameter of the brachial artery remains constant, supporting use of brachial velocity for accurate continuous non-invasive orthostatic vascular resistance responses. The magnitude of the orthostatic forearm vascular resistance response was unrelated to the baseline brachial arterial diameter, suggesting that upstream vessel size does not matter in the ability to mount a vasoconstrictor response to orthostasis. Public Library of Science 2019-11-15 /pmc/articles/PMC6857923/ /pubmed/31730662 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0224872 Text en © 2019 Claydon et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Claydon, V. E.
Moore, J. P.
Greene, E. R.
Appenzeller, O.
Hainsworth, R.
Evaluation of forearm vascular resistance during orthostatic stress: Velocity is proportional to flow and size doesn’t matter
title Evaluation of forearm vascular resistance during orthostatic stress: Velocity is proportional to flow and size doesn’t matter
title_full Evaluation of forearm vascular resistance during orthostatic stress: Velocity is proportional to flow and size doesn’t matter
title_fullStr Evaluation of forearm vascular resistance during orthostatic stress: Velocity is proportional to flow and size doesn’t matter
title_full_unstemmed Evaluation of forearm vascular resistance during orthostatic stress: Velocity is proportional to flow and size doesn’t matter
title_short Evaluation of forearm vascular resistance during orthostatic stress: Velocity is proportional to flow and size doesn’t matter
title_sort evaluation of forearm vascular resistance during orthostatic stress: velocity is proportional to flow and size doesn’t matter
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6857923/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31730662
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0224872
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