use of relaxation time as a marker for arterial distensibility
DESCRIPTION
Use of Relaxation Time as a Marker for Arterial Distensibility. C.C. Winchester, N.-Y. Chou, and L.W. Winchester University of Mary Washington, Fredericksburg, VA, USA CW Optics, Inc., Seaford, VA, USA. Patent Pending. EMBS 2008. Arterial Distensibility and Cardiovascular Disease. - PowerPoint PPT PresentationTRANSCRIPT
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Use of Relaxation Time as a Marker for Arterial
Distensibility
C.C. Winchester, N.-Y. Chou, and L.W. WinchesterUniversity of Mary Washington, Fredericksburg, VA, USA
CW Optics, Inc., Seaford, VA, USA
EMBS 2008
Patent Pending
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Arterial Distensibility and Cardiovascular Disease
• Distensibility: arterial distension/pulse pressure• Associated with a number of cardiovascular
risk factors• Early detection
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Current Methods of Assessing Arterial Distensibility
• Ankle Brachial Index (ABI)
• Intima-Media Thickness (IMT)• Flow-Mediated Dilation (FMD)
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Arterial Relaxation Time
• The time it takes to relax to the baseline diameter
• Uses timing measurements of the pulse waves to infer the conditions of peripheral arteries
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Protocol
• Two different sensors, piezoelectric and photoelectric, on each hand
• Collect baseline data with hands at heart-level
• Arm raised while data were collected for another 400 s
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Data Collection
• Sensors connected to storage oscilloscope
• Oscilloscope connected to computer
• >1kHz acquisition rate
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Data Analysis
• Savitzky-Golay fourth-order filtering technique
• Peak detection algorithm
• Computed time delays
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Both Hands at Heart Level Right Arm Raised
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Observations
• Decreased blood velocity in the right arm and a delay in pulse waveform in that arm as compared to the left arm (control)
• After sudden dilation, brachial artery relaxes back to its normal condition as indicated by the delay approaching that of the baseline.
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Subject Characteristics
• Normotensive– 6 female, 4 male– Ages 19-60
• Hypertensive– 4 male– 3 overweight, 1 with pacemaker
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Computations
• Delay times were fitted to the equation below
xxxx ttBAtY /exp)( 0
Y delay time
A constant
B maximum time delay before raising the arm
t0 time where subject raised right arm
τx relaxation time
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Results
• Normal τP: 78.8 ± 15.60 s
• Hypertensive τP: 584 ± 116 s
• Normal τV: 50.45 ± 16.28 s
• Hypertensive τV: undetermined
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• r: radius; 4.46 mm (Betik et al.)
• v: velocity
• 1: control; before raising the arm
• 2: after raising the arm
Constant Flow
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222
211 rvrvFlow
Betik, A.C., V.B. Luckham, and R.L. Hughson. Flow-mediated dilation in human brachial artery after different circulatory occlusion conditions. Am J Physiol Heart Circ Physiol 286: H442-H448, 2004.
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Time Delay
Using the measured time delay and an estimated length of the brachial artery (35 cm), the relationship between V1 and V2 can be determined.
21 V
L
V
LT
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Comparison with FMD
•dilation of 3% is computed
•In agreement with values of 3% to 8% obtained from ultrasound measurements (Pyke et al., Betik et al., Stoner et al.)
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Betik, A.C., V.B. Luckham, and R.L. Hughson. Flow-mediated dilation in human brachial artery after different circulatory occlusion conditions. Am J Physiol Heart Circ Physiol 286: H442-H448, 2004.
Pyke, K.E., E.M. Dwyer, and M.E. Tschakovsky. Impact of controlling shear rate on flow-mediated dilation responses in the brachial artery of humans. J Appl Physiol 97: 499-508, 2004.
Stoner, L., M. Sabatier, K. Edge, and K. McCully. Relationship between blood velocity and conduit artery diameter and the effects of smoking on vascular responsiveness. J Appl Physiol 96: 2139-2145, 2004.
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Clinical Applications/Future Work
• The extent of which venous emptying stimulates arterial dilation
• In-office measurements• Monitor pre-atherosclerotic patients
and other at risk patients.• Larger study to investigate relaxation
time pre-hypertensive subjects.
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Acknowledgments
•CW Optics, Inc
•Volunteer subjects
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