Malik A Rauoof, Kondragunta Venkateswarlu, Kullo Iftikhar J
Division of Cardiovascular Diseases, Mayo Clinic, 200 First Street Southwest, Rochester, MN 55905, USA.
Hypertension. 2008 Jun;51(6):1512-8. doi: 10.1161/HYPERTENSIONAHA.107.106088. Epub 2008 Apr 21.
Vascular reactivity may affect the stiffness characteristics of the arterial wall. We investigated the association between forearm microcirculatory and conduit artery function and measures of arterial stiffness in 527 asymptomatic non-Hispanic white adults without known cardiovascular disease. High-resolution ultrasonography of the brachial artery (ba) was performed to assess forearm microcirculatory function (ba blood flow velocity, local shear stress, and forearm vascular resistance at rest and during reactive hyperemia) and conduit artery function (ba flow-mediated dilatation [baFMD] and ba nitroglycerin-mediated dilatation [baNMD]). Arterial stiffness was assessed by cuff-derived brachial pulse pressure and aortic pulse wave velocity (aPWV) measured by applanation tonometry. In regression analyses that adjusted for heart rate, mean arterial pressure, height, cardiovascular risk factors, and hypertension medication and statin use, higher baseline ba systolic velocity and systolic shear stress were associated with greater pulse pressure (P=0.0002 and P=0.006, respectively) and higher aPWV (each P<0.0001). During hyperemia, lower ba mean velocity and lower mean shear stress were associated with higher pulse pressure (P=0.045 and P=0.036, respectively), whereas both systolic and mean velocity (P<0.0001 and P=0.002, respectively) and systolic and mean shear stress (P<0.0001 and P=0.003, respectively) were inversely associated with aPWV. baFMD was not associated with pulse pressure but was inversely associated with aPWV (P=0.011). baNMD was inversely associated with pulse pressure (P=0.0002) and aPWV (P=0.008). Our findings demonstrate that impaired forearm microvascular function (in the form of elevated resting blood flow velocity and impaired flow reserve) and impaired brachial artery reactivity are associated with increased arterial stiffness.
血管反应性可能会影响动脉壁的僵硬度特征。我们在527名无已知心血管疾病的无症状非西班牙裔白人成年人中,研究了前臂微循环和传导动脉功能与动脉僵硬度指标之间的关联。采用高分辨率超声检查肱动脉(ba),以评估前臂微循环功能(静息和反应性充血期间的ba血流速度、局部剪切应力和前臂血管阻力)和传导动脉功能(ba血流介导的扩张[baFMD]和ba硝酸甘油介导的扩张[baNMD])。通过袖带测量肱动脉脉搏压和采用压平式眼压计测量主动脉脉搏波速度(aPWV)来评估动脉僵硬度。在针对心率、平均动脉压、身高、心血管危险因素、高血压用药和他汀类药物使用进行校正的回归分析中,较高的基线ba收缩期速度和收缩期剪切应力分别与较高的脉搏压(P = 0.0002和P = 0.006)以及较高的aPWV相关(各P < 0.0001)。在充血期间,较低的ba平均速度和较低的平均剪切应力分别与较高的脉搏压相关(P = 0.045和P = 0.036),而收缩期和平均速度(分别为P < 0.0001和P = 0.002)以及收缩期和平均剪切应力(分别为P < 0.0001和P = 0.003)均与aPWV呈负相关。baFMD与脉搏压无关,但与aPWV呈负相关(P = 0.011)。baNMD与脉搏压呈负相关(P = 0.0002),与aPWV呈负相关(P = 0.008)。我们的研究结果表明,前臂微血管功能受损(表现为静息血流速度升高和血流储备受损)以及肱动脉反应性受损与动脉僵硬度增加有关。