P74 WALL SHEAR RATE AND BRACHIAL ARTERY FLOW-MEDIATED DILATORY RESPONSE BETWEEN HEALTHY YOUNG AND OLDER POPULATIONS USING MULTI-GATE SPECTRAL DOPPLER ULTRASOUND Kunihiko Aizawa 1, Sara Sbragi 2, Alessandro Ramalli 3, Piero Tortoli 3, Francesco Casanova 1, Carmela Morizzo 2, Clare Thorn 1, Angela Shore 1, Phillip Gates 1, Carlo Palombo 2 1Diabetes and Vascular Medicine Research Centre, NIHR Exeter Clinical Research Facility, University of Exeter Medical School, UK 2Department of Surgical, Medical, Molecular Pathology and Critical Care Medicine, University of Pisa, Italy 3Department of Information Engineering, University of Florence, Italy Background: Ageing is associated with an impaired brachial artery flow-mediated dilatation (FMD) response and a reduced wall shear rate (WSR) stimulus may contribute to this response. However, a detailed analysis of the WSR-FMD response is lacking due to inherent difficulties of WSR estima-tion near the arterial wall by conventional ultrasound. We have overcome this limitation by using an integrated multi-gate Doppler FMD evaluation sys-tem, and in this study, we compared the WSR-FMD relationship between a healthy young and older population. Methods: Data from 33 young (YNG: 27.5 4.9yrs) and 33 older (OLD: 64.9 3.6yrs) individuals were analysed. FMD was assessed using Ultrasound Advanced Open Platform (ULA-OP). Acquired raw data were post-processed using custom-designed software to obtain WSR and diameter parameters. Results: Peak WSR [WSRpk: 635(585e685) vs 424(374e473) s1]andabso-lute WSR increase [WSRD: 548(504e592) vs 356(313e400) s1]were greater in YNG than OLD (both p < 0.05). WSR area under the curve until its return to baseline value (WSRauc) was also greater in YNG than OLD [18632(16395e20868) vs 13049(10812e15285) au, p < 0.05]. WSRpk, WSRD and WSRauc were associated with both absolute and percentage diameter increases in YNG (all p < 0.05). However, none of the WSR pa-rameters in OLD were associated with absolute or percentage diameter increases. Conclusions: These results demonstrate 1) a reduced WSR stimulus during reactive hyperaemia in OLD compared withYNG,and 2) theabsence of an association between WSR parameters and FMD response in OLD. These ob-servations suggest that in older adults, diminished WSR together with WSR-independent factors are important determinants of the FMD response.
Wall shear rate and brachial artery flow-mediated dilatory response between healthy young and older populations using multi-gate spectral Doppler ultrasound
Carlo Palombo
2017-01-01
Abstract
P74 WALL SHEAR RATE AND BRACHIAL ARTERY FLOW-MEDIATED DILATORY RESPONSE BETWEEN HEALTHY YOUNG AND OLDER POPULATIONS USING MULTI-GATE SPECTRAL DOPPLER ULTRASOUND Kunihiko Aizawa 1, Sara Sbragi 2, Alessandro Ramalli 3, Piero Tortoli 3, Francesco Casanova 1, Carmela Morizzo 2, Clare Thorn 1, Angela Shore 1, Phillip Gates 1, Carlo Palombo 2 1Diabetes and Vascular Medicine Research Centre, NIHR Exeter Clinical Research Facility, University of Exeter Medical School, UK 2Department of Surgical, Medical, Molecular Pathology and Critical Care Medicine, University of Pisa, Italy 3Department of Information Engineering, University of Florence, Italy Background: Ageing is associated with an impaired brachial artery flow-mediated dilatation (FMD) response and a reduced wall shear rate (WSR) stimulus may contribute to this response. However, a detailed analysis of the WSR-FMD response is lacking due to inherent difficulties of WSR estima-tion near the arterial wall by conventional ultrasound. We have overcome this limitation by using an integrated multi-gate Doppler FMD evaluation sys-tem, and in this study, we compared the WSR-FMD relationship between a healthy young and older population. Methods: Data from 33 young (YNG: 27.5 4.9yrs) and 33 older (OLD: 64.9 3.6yrs) individuals were analysed. FMD was assessed using Ultrasound Advanced Open Platform (ULA-OP). Acquired raw data were post-processed using custom-designed software to obtain WSR and diameter parameters. Results: Peak WSR [WSRpk: 635(585e685) vs 424(374e473) s1]andabso-lute WSR increase [WSRD: 548(504e592) vs 356(313e400) s1]were greater in YNG than OLD (both p < 0.05). WSR area under the curve until its return to baseline value (WSRauc) was also greater in YNG than OLD [18632(16395e20868) vs 13049(10812e15285) au, p < 0.05]. WSRpk, WSRD and WSRauc were associated with both absolute and percentage diameter increases in YNG (all p < 0.05). However, none of the WSR pa-rameters in OLD were associated with absolute or percentage diameter increases. Conclusions: These results demonstrate 1) a reduced WSR stimulus during reactive hyperaemia in OLD compared withYNG,and 2) theabsence of an association between WSR parameters and FMD response in OLD. These ob-servations suggest that in older adults, diminished WSR together with WSR-independent factors are important determinants of the FMD response.File | Dimensione | Formato | |
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