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. 2006;35(4):509-15.

Correlation analysis between different parameters of conduit artery and microvascular vasodilation

Affiliations
  • PMID: 17148850

Correlation analysis between different parameters of conduit artery and microvascular vasodilation

Tommaso Gori et al. Clin Hemorheol Microcirc. 2006.

Abstract

Impaired endothelial responsiveness to specific vasodilator stimuli has been used as a surrogate marker of cardiovascular risk. Multiple methods allow testing endothelial responses in both microvessels and conduit arteries, but it is still unclear whether there is a relationship in endothelial function between these two different vascular beds. Twenty-five healthy young non smoking male volunteers (age range 24-45) were enrolled. Radial (conduit) artery (endothelium-dependent) flow-mediated dilation (FMD), microvascular cutaneous reactive hyperemia (using laser Doppler) and acetylcholine-induced microvascular vasodilation (laser Doppler iontophoresis) were measured. Data were analyzed in a randomized fashion in order to test the existence of a correlation among these measures of endothelium (in)dependent vasodilation. Conduit artery FMD showed a negative correlation with resting radial artery diameter (R=0.44, P<0.05). There was a correlation between peak responsiveness to acetylcholine and peak reactive hyperemia (R=0.41, P<0.05). Conversely, absolutely no correlation was shown between FMD and measures of microvascular vasomotion, including reactive hyperemia (P=ns) and acetylcholine-induced vasodilation (P=ns). Using three different human in vivo models, we test conduit artery and microvascular endothelial vasodilation. While microvascular flow reserve measurements induced by endothelium-dependent and independent stimuli appear to be linearly correlated, we show no correlation in endothelium-dependent vasomotion between the micro- and macrocirculation.

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