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Non-invasive characterization of total arterial compliance by simultaneous acquisition of pressure and flow: advantages of the pulse pressure method

The authors compare three proposed indices of total arterial compliance (Ctot) in normal volunteers (n=9) and patients with coronary artery disease (n=14) using a non-invasive approach (echo-Doppler and carotid tonometry): (1) the pulse pressure method (PPM), (2) the area method (AM) and (3) the str...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Carlier, S., Segers, P., Pasquet, A., Armstrong, G., Greenberg, N.L., Stergiopulos, N., Marwick, T., Thomas, J.D.
Format: Conference Proceeding
Language:English
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Summary:The authors compare three proposed indices of total arterial compliance (Ctot) in normal volunteers (n=9) and patients with coronary artery disease (n=14) using a non-invasive approach (echo-Doppler and carotid tonometry): (1) the pulse pressure method (PPM), (2) the area method (AM) and (3) the stroke volume-to-pulse pressure ratio (SV/PP). The best agreement was found between the PPM and SV/PP. Compliance estimates were lower in the patient group (PPM: 1.2/spl plusmn/0.4 vs. 1.6/spl plusmn/0.2; AM: 1.6/spl plusmn/0.6 vs. 2.8/spl plusmn/1.3; SV/PP: 1.8/spl plusmn/0.6 vs. 2.4/spl plusmn/0.4), being older (64/spl plusmn/14 vs. 35/spl plusmn/4 y) and with known atherosclerosis. The best correlation between compliance and age was found with PPM (r/sup 2/=0.52). AM varied with the chosen computation interval in diastole. These preliminary data describing the very first use of the PPM on non-invasive human recordings suggest that PPM could be a more robust estimator of Ctot than the widely used AM, and that SV/PP could be a reasonable simpler surrogate.
ISSN:0276-6547
DOI:10.1109/CIC.1998.731961